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Who Won Gulf War II?
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The weekend TV pundits
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declared Saddam Hussein the victor of Gulf War II. This even though U.N.
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weapons inspectors returned to Iraq and the sanctions remain in place. Saddam
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is now "better off" (Al Hunt, CNN's Capital Gang ), having divided the
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allies (Steve Roberts, CNN's Late Edition ) and gained "a new
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international legitimacy" (Paul Gigot, NewsHour With Jim Lehrer ). The
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return to the status quo ante has politically isolated the United States
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(Gigot; John McLaughlin, The McLaughlin Group ). Second prize was awarded
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to Russia, for insinuating itself into the dispute and re-establishing its
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power base in the Middle East (Eleanor Clift and Pat Buchanan, The
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McLaughlin Group ). William Safire on NBC's Meet the Press moaned
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that the week's events marked "the beginning of the Baghdad/Moscow axis," in
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which the impoverished Russians would rearm the Iraqis in return for oil.
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Safire all but promised Armageddon would soon follow.
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"I think
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we've got a better audience worldwide," said Nazar Hamdoon, the languid Iraqi
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U.N. ambassador. Better audience? Did he win sweeps week with his performances
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on Meet the Press , CNN's Evans & Novak , and ABC's This
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Week ?
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Doyle McManus decoded Hamdoon on PBS's Washington Week
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in Review . Saddam had played a successful bait-and-switch game on the West:
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First, he conjured up the bogus inspector crisis--complaining about U.S.
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domination of the U.N. teams and ejecting them--to attract the world's
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attention. Then he changed the subject to the unjust imposition of sanctions on
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his people. Enlisting the Russians in his cause, he successfully moved world
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opinion toward lifting the restrictions.
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Swallowing
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the Iraqi bait whole were Gulf doves Robert Novak ( Capital Gang and
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Meet the Press ) and McLaughlin, who once again called for an end to the
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sanctions. Dying Iraqi children were "something the liberals should think
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about," said conservative Novak, tapping his long-hidden well of compassion.
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Clift, Roberts, and others also sympathized with the starving Iraqi masses, on
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whom the sanctions have fallen the hardest. McLaughlin displayed a statistic
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claiming the sanctions had contributed to the deaths of as many as 1.4-million
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Iraqi civilians since the end of Gulf War I. That, of course, set off a
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squabble about the validity of the numbers and a fumbling calculus of how many
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lives had been saved from chemical and biological warfare by keeping Saddam "in
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his box" since 1990.
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The pundits gave President Clinton no credit.
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The peaceful resolution revealed him as weak, was the consensus view. "As
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president of the United States, he didn't feel he was potentially powerful
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enough to exercise" his options, said former Newt aide Tony Blankley, now
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opinionizing on CNN's Late Edition . Almost alone supporting the
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president was Mark Shields ( Capital Gang , NewsHour ), who said the
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"commando columnists" calling for Saddam's scalp must understand that
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assassinating him was "never a possibility" during Gulf War I and isn't "a
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possibility now."
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Presaging
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next week's clichés, Novak, Shields, and Susan Page ( Late Edition ) said
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that only a renewed "Middle East peace process" could bring stability to the
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region. Pissier than a skunk, Safire rejected the linkage between the Iraqi
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disturbance and the civil war in Israel/Palestine. "Back seven years ago there
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was no Oslo process and the Arabs were with us because they were afraid--they
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were being attacked," he said.
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The commentariat left nothing but furious gnaw marks on
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Issue 2, the fertility therapies behind the "miracle" of the McCaughey
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septuplets. Their problem is that the survival of all the babies decanted the
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necessary conflict from the story. This Week 's George Will did work in
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an abortion angle, exclaiming that Congress would never regulate fertility
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technologies because the Supreme Court had decided that "a fetus is
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nothing."
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Issue 3, the Piscataway,
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N.J., civil-rights settlement (in which civil-rights groups paid off a fired
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white teacher to avoid a potentially unfavorable Supreme Court ruling), also
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sputtered on the shows. Defending the settlement were Mara Liasson on Fox
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News Sunday ("Bad cases make bad law"), Roberts ("An indefensible case"),
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and Clarence Page on This Week ("This is not an affirmative-action case
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in the view of the civil-rights community").
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In a
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rational world, the loopy charge that the Clinton administration had traded
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campaign donations for Arlington Cemetery burial plots (Issue 4) would have
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damaged Insight (the magazine owned by convicted felon the Rev. Sun
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Myung Moon that published the story), the radio mouths who repeated the lies,
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and the Republicans who exploited the story. Instead, the Sunday pundits blamed
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President Clinton for being the type of guy who would do that sort of thing,
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even though he didn't do it. "People were really ready to believe it," said
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Susan Page. It took root, said Brit Hume ( Fox News Sunday ), because it
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had a "ring of truth" to it.
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Breaking News: Susan Page reported on
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Late Edition that President Clinton would make a January recess
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appointment of Bill Lann Lee to the job the Senate won't confirm him for,
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assistant attorney general for civil rights.
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A Fun Fact You Wouldn't
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Know Unless You Watched the Sunday Shows: Two babies are twins. Three are
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triplets. Five, quintuplets. One? A singlet .
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Wacky Tangent of the
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Week:
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Washington Week in Review host Ken Bode scolded the New
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York Times
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Magazine for a Nov. 9 fashion spread he said endorsed the
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now-discredited fashion trend of "heroin chic." Maybe it's been a while since
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Bode has partied till 4 a.m., but to "Pundit Central" 's eyes the models look
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like nothing more sinister than extremely tired and slender party trash,
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not emaciated junkies.
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--Jack
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Shafer
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