While Bush pranced around Europe celebrating the good old pre-nuclear war war days, with his rhetoric conveniently ignoring the reality of both actual and potential nuclear weapons and what they do to all the political equations, the Non-Proliferation Treaty conference in New York plodded on, still without even an agenda in its second week.
But while the Bush celebrated the decisive U.S. efforts in securing victory in World War II by working with allies, the Bush administration was widely seen as the greatest barrier to solving problems that could lead to this generation's experience of backyard devastation.
An Associated Press report, appearing in the Toronto Globe and Mail:
Washington isn't taking "the common bargain" of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty as seriously as it once did, hurting global support for the U.S. campaign to shut down the North Korean and Iranian nuclear programs, former chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix says.
U.S. Undersecretary of State John Bolton, by questioning the value of treaties and international law, has also damaged the U.S. position, Mr. Blix said.
"There is a feeling the common edifice of the international community is being dismantled," the Swedish arms expert said.
Mr. Blix, now chairman of the Swedish government-sponsored Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission, spoke with reporters Monday in the second week of a month-long conference to review the 1970 nonproliferation treaty.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20050510.wblix0510/BNStory/International/
Joseph Kahn reports in the New York Times that Yang Xiyu, the top China official involved in North Korean nuclear negotiations said in an interview, "It is true that we do not yet have tangible achievements" in ending North Korea's nuclear weapons program. But a basic reason for the unsuccessful effort lies in the lack of cooperation from the U.S. side."
The statement, Kahn writes, is noteworthy "because the Chinese authorities very rarely speak to journalists about the issue. The comments reflect growing frustration in Beijing with the Bush administration." Similar sentiments were expressed by a leader in the Russian legislature.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/13/international/asia/13korea.html?pagewanted=print
North Korea announced another step in extracting weapons grade plutonium from its main nuclear reactor, as a move "necessary to bolster its nuclear arsenal," according to an unnamed North Korean official in a Los Angeles Times report.
But several overseas newspapers noted that the U.S. right-rigging media is concentrating on the "Iran nuclear crisis." Reports midweek indicated that Iran is ready to formally end its freeze on nuclear activities, dooming the stalled negotiations with European countries.
The chickenhawks are likely concentrating on Iran because it's not believed they as yet have nuclear weapons, so according to chickenhawk logic, because they aren't a threat---whereas North Korea may be capable of launching an atomic attack on San Francisco--they are the chosen target of the only action the Bushheads are capable of: bullying.