Having denounced the Kyoto global-warming treaty, President Bush then
asked the National Academy of Sciences to
see if there was a global warming problem and then took to Europe a
proposal for a multimillion-dollar research effort.
This was the latest manifestation of a disconcerting tendency in this administration to act first, propelled by ideological imperatives, and study later.
The Rumsfeld-in-Wonderland Pentagon is working on a crash program to
deploy a handful of missile interceptors before
the end of the current presidential term, even if they have not been
fully tested - and even if Russian President Vladimir Putin, whom Mr. Bush
will see in Slovenia tomorrow, is still refusing to agree to changes in
the Antiballistic Missile Treaty.
There are other examples in President Bush's record of "leap before
you look." Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill denounced
the Clinton administration for "too frequent" bailouts of failing economies.
Now the Bush administration has endorsed a
$17 billion World Bank and International Monetary Fund bailout for
Turkey and $13 billion for Argentina.
Last March, President Bush upset the visiting president of South Korea
by announcing, in the presence of his guest,
that he didn't trust North Korea and had no plans to resume negotiations
with the Kim Jong-il regime. Now the
administration has announced new talks with North Korea. Maybe helping
to change his mind was a memo forwarded
by his father, urging on him the importance of these negotiations to
end the threat of North Korean missiles.
The administration had said it didn't plan to send any special envoy to the Middle East. It has now sent two - CIA Director George Tenet and Assistant Secretary of State William Burns, dealing, respectively, with a cease-fire and the resumption of peace talks.
At home, Attorney General John Ashcroft promised a new study of racial and ethnic inequities in federal death sentences. But meanwhile he plans to proceed with the execution of 19 men on federal death row, only two of whom are white.
But perhaps one should not be surprised at this tendency to act now
and think later. This, after all, was the president
who decided how much money he wanted to commit for tax relief before
he knew how much he would need for defense, education, and prescription
drugs.