A Call To Action
The New York Times
December 30, 2004
EDITORIAL
President Bush finally roused himself yesterday from his vacation in Crawford, Tex., to telephone his sympathy to the leaders of India, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Indonesia, and to speak publicly about the devastation of Sunday's tsunamis in Asia. He also hurried to put as much distance as possible between himself and America's initial measly aid offer of $15 million, and he took issue with an earlier statement by the United Nations' emergency relief coordinator, Jan Egeland, who had called the overall aid efforts by rich Western nations "stingy." "The person who made that statement was very misguided and ill informed," the president said.
We beg to differ. Mr. Egeland was right on target. We hope Secretary of State Colin Powell was privately embarrassed when, two days into a catastrophic disaster that hit 12 of the world's poorer countries and will cost billions of dollars to meliorate, he held a press conference to say that America, the world's richest nation, would contribute $15 million. That's less than half of what Republicans plan to spend on the Bush inaugural festivities.
The American aid figure for the current disaster is now $35 million, and we applaud Mr. Bush's turnaround. But $35 million remains a miserly drop in the bucket, and is in keeping with the pitiful amount of the United States budget that we allocate for nonmilitary foreign aid. According to a poll, most Americans believe the United States spends 24 percent of its budget on aid to poor countries; it actually spends well under a quarter of 1 percent.
Bush administration officials help create that perception gap. Fuming at the charge of stinginess, Mr. Powell pointed to disaster relief and said the United States "has given more aid in the last four years than any other nation or combination of nations in the world." But for development aid, America gave $16.2 billion in 2003; the European Union gave $37.1 billion. In 2002, those numbers were $13.2 billion for America, and $29.9 billion for Europe.
Making things worse, we often pledge more money than we actually deliver. Victims of the earthquake in Bam, Iran, a year ago are still living in tents because aid, including ours, has not materialized in the amounts pledged. And back in 2002, Mr. Bush announced his Millennium Challenge account to give African countries development assistance of up to $5 billion a year, but the account has yet to disperse a single dollar.
Mr. Bush said yesterday that the $35 million we've now pledged "is only the beginning" of the United States' recovery effort. Let's hope that is true, and that this time, our actions will match our promises.
Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company
Contributors
Links
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2004
(72)
-
▼
December
(59)
- Fw: Pass it on: How to help with tsunami relief
- Are We Stingy? Yes
- December 26, 2004Governors Unite in Fight Against ...
- Sunday News Quiz
- Army Historian Cites Lack of Postwar Plan
- FBI E-Mail Refers to Presidential Order Authorizin...
- America, the Indifferent
- 2004 Elections
- Fw: And so this is Christmas
- Special Report
- Goodbye Jack Newfield
- Democratic Leadership Rethinking Abortion
- Students to Bear More of the Cost of College
- Fighting On Is the Only Option, Americans SayBy KI...
- December 21, 2004PRISONERSNew F.B.I. Files Describ...
- A True Safety Net
- December 20, 2004Administration Looks to Curb Grow...
- My Fight Against American Phantoms
- Wall St. Lobby Quietly Tackles Social Security
- FBI Claims More Arab Prisoners Abused
- A Tenuous Hold on the Middle Class
- Interest Rates and Deficits
- America's Fallujan Dystopia
- Buying Into Failure
- December 16, 2004House's Author of Drug Benefit Jo...
- Industry Hires House's Author of Drug Benefit
- What's New in the Legal World? A Growing Campaign ...
- Most G.O.P. Plans to Remake Social Security Involv...
- Media reports pave the way for Social Security pri...
- My Tortured Inheritance
- CANADA BUSY SENDING BACK BUSH-DODGERSOttawa, Canad...
- Giving The Gift Of War
- So You Want To Play Nice, Huh?
- Muslim Scholars Increasingly Debate Unholy War
- The New York Timesfox/sideways_pfDecember 10, 2004...
- Is Liberalism Dead?
- He lost an arm in Iraq; the Army wants money
- Borrow, Speculate and Hope
- Howard Dean's Speech in Washington
- Things to do before January 20, 2005A "to do" list...
- Dear Friend:This weekend, state Democratic Party l...
- Lost in a Masquerade
- Bush Ties Attack in Saudi Arabia to Iraqi Elections
- Inventing a Crisis
- Ten Appalling Lies We Were Told About Iraq
- Fly Me to the Moon
- (no subject)
- Candle Light March To End Child Labor
- Children pay cost of Iraq's chaos
- Jesse Jackson on Fair Elections
- Fw: letter from a concerned Bush Supporter
- A Call To Action
- Kerik's life not all an open book
- A ticking time bomb
- "Just Don't Do It"
- The Nascar Nightly News: Anchorman Get Your Gun
- Robbery By Bankruptcy
- Your Brain On Porn
- A Call To Action
-
▼
December
(59)
No comments:
Post a Comment