Radar spin and recoil
2007-12-06
The Washington Post referred to George Bush's interpretation of
the National Intelligence Estimate on Iran's nuclear intentions
and capabilities as "neck-snapping spin." He was sold down the
river by his own spy services but tried to pretend he wasn't. The
Czech government, by saying the NIE report changes nothing
with regard to its radar plans, was showing more loyalty to Bush
than some of his own people. The Czech radar cadre
(Topolánek, Vondra, Schwarzenberg, Pojar, Klvaňa) has put its
own spin on the NIE report by insisting, for example, that the
radar was always meant to guard against conventional weapons,
but a perceptible shift is nevertheless taking place. Czech
officials are trying to have it both ways by remaining loyal to
Bush and by transferring responsibility for the final decision on
missile defense to Nato. This approach, given the implications of
the NIE report, probably means the radar issue will be put on
the back burner in about mid-2008.
[Czech Republic Alexandr Karel Tomáš foreign ministry minister
Dick Cheney]
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