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B-2 Or Not B-2?
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Everybody leads with that case-against-Iraq speech President Clinton gave at
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the Pentagon yesterday. Speaking to an auditorium full of military and civilian
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Defense employees, and from a platform he shared with his Secretary of Defense
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and his Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Clinton justified possible airstrikes
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with an implicit reference to the failures of appeasement in the period just
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before World War II. "Force can never be the first answer," said Clinton. "But
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sometimes, it's the only answer."
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In its piece on the speech, USA Today mentions that the Secretary-General of the
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U.N., Kofi Annan, is going to Baghdad to try for a peaceful resolution. The
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Washington Post makes it clear that if Annan's
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mission fails to produce Iraqi compliance, an air bombardment is a "virtual
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certainty." The administration's old line was, says the paper, "weeks not
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months," but its new one is "days not weeks."
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Both the WP and the New York Times
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note that Clinton has defined down his military objective--now we are after,
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not totally ridding Iraq of mass destruction weapons, but seriously diminishing
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their threat. However, Clinton did not, notes the Times , explain at what
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point he would consider the Iraqi threat seriously diminished.
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The Times ' James Bennet obviously got to somebody present at the
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military briefing Clinton attended just before speaking. His report reveals
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that the briefing ran 45 minutes and centered on the details of a military
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strike. Clinton mostly listened and made no new decisions. But he did ask about
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the potential casualties in a strike, both among Iraqi civilians and American
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pilots. He also asked about Iraq's ability to use chemical and biological
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weapons in a confrontation.
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Both the WP and the NYT mention President Clinton's dismissal
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of Saddam's desire to exempt certain "presidential" sites from weapons
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inspection. One such site, Clinton explained, is 40,000 acres, whereas the
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White House grounds take up but 18. The Times includes this quote of the president's: "We're not talking about a few rooms
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here with delicate personal matters involved." In the age of Lewinsky, you
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don't have to be Freud to find that an interesting choice of words for what
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goes on in the White House.
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The Los
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Angeles Times wisely puts at the top of its lead the simplest, most
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forceful argument Clinton made, one that both USAT and WP omitted
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and the NYT postponed until the last paragraphs of its story: His
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"guarantee" that if Hussein isn't stopped now, he will someday use his
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biochemical weapons.
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The USAT , WP , and LAT fronts all report President
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Clinton's lawyers asked the judge in the Paula Jones case to dismiss her suit
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for lack of substance. The WP runs the text of Clinton's legal motion in the matter, which includes an
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argument that strikes the lay person as bizarrely permissive: Even on the
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assumption that then-Gov. Clinton undertook the actions towards Paula Jones in
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the Excelsior Hotel room that Jones alleges, that would not constitute "hostile
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environment sexual harassment" because Jones went to the room voluntarily, the
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episode only lasted at most 20 minutes, there was no violence or explicit
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threats and she was able to leave when she decided to.
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The NYT front marshals the factors behind that ski lift disaster in
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Italy two weeks ago: on his first flight in the area, the Marine Corps pilot
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did not have maps showing the ski lift, was violating orders to fly 1,000 above
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the ground and was off-course. All this beneath a headline that is simply
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extraordinary in this age of lawyers restraining editors restraining reporters:
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"HOW WAYWARD US PILOT KILLED 20 ON SKI LIFT."
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"I know it's not the most traditional way to balance the budget, but it just
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might work." According to the Wall Street Journal "Tax Report," some 3,000 taxpayers
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recently received notices from the IRS informing them that they each owed the
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agency $300,000,000.
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At the Pentagon, real-world combat requirements come first--except when they
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don't. A WP front-page piece reveals that even though the B2 stealth bomber is the most expensive aircraft ever built
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($2 billion a copy), and could drop large numbers of "bunker buster" bombs on
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Iraq without ever setting foot on skittish Arab runways, it's not likely to see
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action over Iraq. The Pentagon corridor explanation teased out by the WP
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is that if it were to fail it would be a colossal embarrassment for the Air
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Force, while if it were to succeed it might siphon money away from newer hot
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Air Force aircraft programs.
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