Opinion Editorials are posted and archived on JNOnline.com Editorial Dry Bones HAPPY HOLIDAY Behind The Prize as Mohammed El Baradei's Nobel Peace Prize a case of wishful thinking? Did the judges really believe that El Baradei, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has ratcheted up enough political and diplomatic pressure on Iran to stop or slow its nuclear- weapons program? The Nobel citation calls the IAEAs director a "fearless advo- cate" of curbing nuclear arms and calls the importance of his agency's work "incalculable." Or were the judges rewarding El Baradei for refusing to buttress the Bush administration's 2003 claim — and its rationale for the Iraq war— that Saddam Hussein was re-starting Iraq's nuclear weapons program? As history has proved, the Iraqi dictator had no weapons of mass destruction or atomic weapons. And if you're looking for a repeat performance of Israel's 1981 attack on Iraq's Osirak W nuclear reactor, that's highly unlikely. Saddam, no great shakes as a military planner, put all of his nuclear eggs in one basket, making the reactor a tempting target for Israeli fighter- bombers. That one bold attack probably ended the greatest threat in the Middle East and to the Jewish state. Indeed, many of Iraq's neighbors were secretly thrilled by the Israeli strike. For their part, the Iranians learned from the Osirak mission; they have scattered their nuclear facilities — many of them in reinforced bunkers — all over their country, which is about the size of Alaska. And even Israel's undaunted air force probably cannot pull off an Osirak-like operation without some outside help. That help — from either America or NATO — could be an awfully big stick for El Baradei to wield along with economic and political inducements from the Europeans to get Iran's ruling SIT IN LEAF- `4 COVERED RICKETY The Iranians have NUTS. learned from the Osirak mission. mullahs to the bargaining table. Meanwhile, as Washington columnist Douglas Bloomfield points out, Iran is "emboldened by America's problems in Iraq ... and Tehran's treasury is bulging with revenues from soaring oil prices ... [as] billions of those petrodollars" are being pumped into the mul- lahs' nuclear-arms program:' What a mess. If El Baradei can help untangle it — and a little nuclear problem with North Korea — he will have deserved his peace prize. Until then, we're reserving judgment on his pre- mature selection. A LUXURY IN 4Z11 THESE TIMES OF FOLKS MADE HOMELESS BY HURRICANES, EARTHQUAKES AND MASSIVE MUO SIZES' `41 wvmdrybonesproject.com ❑ Reality Check Sinful Politics stopped thinking of myself as a Democrat a good many years ago. It was some time after the left wing of the party decided to punish Hubert Humphrey, a committed liberal and a good and decent man, in the 1968 presidential election and handed the White House to Richard Nixon. Now there was an absolutely brilliant piece of strategy. It did- n't shorten the Vietnam War by a single day and turned over the Supreme Court to conservative control. They followed up this idiotic performance by handing the 1972 nomination to George McGovern, which gave me the choice of either voting for a com- plete stiff or for Nixon. So I waved goodbye and, except for the Bill Clinton years, haven't felt I at October 20 . 2005 a compelling reason to return. I keep looking, though, because I'm not too thrilled with the alternative either. But a recent e-mail reminded me again why I left. I don't usually react to these messages some people feel corn- pelled to send to everyone they know. Everyone has the right to speak their mind, after all. But this one was so vacuous and so smug. It was called "George Bush's Yom Kippur" and had the presi- dent reciting the Al Cheit in repentance for all his "sins" of the past year. As I read down the list of sins, they turned out to be Bush's stubborn refusal to embrace Democratic policies. Call him mistaken. Call him dumb. But a sinner? My guess is this e-mail was elections. They are more drafted by the same intent with striking people who scream poses than devising poli- bloody murder whenev- cies with broad appeal, er they think conserva- voting for feel-good can- tives are imposing their didates in the primaries religious values on the instead of someone with political process. When a chance to win. you accuse someone of You can't win elec- committing a sin, how- George Cantor tions by waving your Colum nist ever, isn't that exactly arms and yelling "No, what you are doing ... No, No." Clinton understood that in spades? His fiscal policies, his appoint- and ran on a program with strong centrist appeal that was ments, his conduct of the war in advanced by the Democratic Iraq — all fair game for criti- Leadership Council. cism. Unless you confuse the The party's left detests the Democratic Party platform for DLC almost as much as it does Torah, though, there is no sin in Sinful George. Aside from 1976, winning an election and follow- however, when voters wanted to ing up with the policies that had punish the Republicans for been approved by the voters. Watergate, the Clinton years were I would even suggest that this the only time the party won the attitude is the very reason that presidency since it decided to Democrats keep losing national turn against Humphrey for not being sufficiently anti-war. Is there a message there? Of course, religion should play a part in informing your choices as a citizen. It's a pretty pallid religion that wouldn't. But that's a far cry from calling your oppo- nent a sinner, which is the sort of name-calling the extremists on both sides routinely practice these days. I keep reading that the day is coming when moderates on both sides will break away and form a new political party. Where the . Democrats of Clinton and Joe Lieberman will sit down with the Republicans of John McCain and Rudy Giuliani. It can't come soon enough for me. I want a home. ❑ George Cantor's e-mail address is gcantor614@aol.com. 47