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[Rachel Marsden] Bush still a bogeyman to Europeans

July 31, 2011 - 19:07 By 류근하
If online comments and e-mails from friends are any indication, the overwhelming feeling about the American debt crisis here in Europe is that if Barack Obama is now in a position of having to raise the debt ceiling or face default, the crisis can only be traced back to George W. Bush.

Europeans are, in part, blaming Bush’s post-9/11 military funding ― yet somehow the phrase “overstretched Greek army” doesn’t exist to explain how that country managed to economically implode.

While there’s little economic return in the limited act of paying for a soldier to travel to Afghanistan or Iraq and use the finest technological equipment to shoot a terrorist in the face, there can be great economic return on the overall outcome of war. World War II cost the United States more than $900 billion in 1945, yet the surge in military spending led to an economic boom. The Marshall Plan to rebuild Europe increased America’s presence and economic/trade opportunities in the region. The increased presence of military bases caused trade to build up around them.

Likewise, after a period of Carter-era military neglect and economic stagnation, the Reagan era saw a Cold War military buildup and an increase in economic growth. Who can argue that the fall of the Berlin Wall wasn’t beneficial for American business and trade?

Wars are only bad for the economy if the person in charge has no idea how to parlay it into opportunity. Bush had a historical sense of what military action in the Middle East would mean. As he explained in an interview late last year, his father and the father of Japan’s leader were once signing up to fight each other, yet their sons later ended up working together to keep the peace. It’s not hard to believe that Bush could envision the “long game,” but it’s tougher to imagine the current White House occupant seeing around his Nobel Peace Prize for Being a Cool Dude to the lasting peace, prosperity and stability achieved through military victory.

Industry builds up around military efforts. Someone has to make the drones, the guns and the missiles. It’s probably not the most politically correct thing to suggest, but there’s much more of a long-term financial return involved in a terrorist being blown up than there is in blowing stimulus funds to pay someone to plug a pothole in a road.

Chinese officials have said recently that America can’t expect to keep up its international defense and security spending at about 20 percent of the annual budget ― all while they keep increasing theirs. How convenient for them! Perhaps the United States also should have taken Gorbachev’s advice on defense spending during the Cold War? Maybe America should pull back and just let the Chinese take over the global market for high-tech defense products entirely?

Europeans also fault Bush for deregulating Wall Street ― another myth. If anything, the problematic deregulation can be traced back to Clinton and Carter. Clinton’s Financial Services Modernization Act allowed previously separated investment and commercial banks to finally merge with each other in a giant deregulatory orgy. It was Texan Phil Gramm and other Republicans who tried during the Clinton era to weaken Jimmy Carter’s Community Reinvestment Act of 1977, which forced banks to give loans to people based on important criteria such as skin color rather than silly things like the ability to make payments.

Some say that Bush had eight years to scrap the Carter-Clinton programs. Sure, and just imagine what the reaction would have been had he tried, absent the post-2008 meltdown context, to take the mortgages and lines of credit out of the hands of minorities in the interest of imposing fiscal responsibility.

Bush did try to increase regulation of the financial sector through the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, increasing financial reporting and auditing, but he can hardly be blamed for the fact that people were set on gorging themselves on the full benefit of the Clinton-Carter programs.

Some argue that Obama is merely a victim who was in the wrong place at the wrong time when the till ran empty. It might be easier to believe that if he’d remove his hands from it for even a second and stop crying for refills.

By Rachel Marsden 

Rachel Marsden is a columnist, political strategist and former Fox News host who writes regularly for major publications in the U.S. and abroad. Her website can be found at http://www.rachelmarsden.com. ― Ed.

(Tribune Media Services)