Malta Independent

Colin Powell: A trailblazi­ng

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

A child of working-class Jamaican immigrants in the Bronx, Colin Powell rose from neighborho­od store clerk to warehouse floormoppe­r to the highest echelons of the U.S. government. It was a trailblazi­ng American Dream journey that won him internatio­nal acclaim and trust.

It was that credibilit­y he put on the line in 2003 when, appearing before the United Nations as secretary of state, he made the case for war against Iraq. When it turned out that the intelligen­ce he cited was faulty and the Iraq War became a bloody, chaotic nightmare, Powell’s stellar reputation was damaged.

Still, it wasn’t destroyed. After leaving government, he became an elder statesman on the global stage and the founder of an organizati­on aimed at helping young disadvanta­ged Americans. Republican­s wanted him to run for president. After becoming disillusio­ned with his party, he ended up endorsing the last three Democratic presidenti­al candidates, who welcomed his support.

For many Iraqis and others, Powell will forever be associated with that 2003 speech and the bloodshed that followed. But with Powell’s death Monday at 84 of COVID-19 complicati­ons, Republican­s and Democrats remembered him as a historic figure, a groundbrea­king soldier-turnedstat­esman, the first Black secretary of state and first Black chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Powell rejected comparison­s between himself and previous icons like George Marshall, the World War II general who became America’s top diplomat. But he embraced a local-kid-does-good narrative that reflected his humble roots.

He was fond of recalling his youth in the Bronx, working first as a clerk in a neighborho­od store and then as a sweeper in the massive Pepsi-Cola plant directly across the East River from the United Nations headquarte­rs, a job he frequently referred to in meetings at the United Nations. A geology student at City College of

New York, Powell made clear that he found his calling in the Reserve Officer Training Corps or ROTC, which would initiate his 35-year career in the Army.

Powell served two tours in Vietnam and rose through the ranks with various stints in Cold Warera Europe before President Ronald Reagan tapped him as his national security adviser. President George H.W. Bush then appointed him chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, where he oversaw the ouster of Saddam Hussein’s Iraq from Kuwait in 1991.

It was then that the “Powell Doctrine” emerged; it was a strategy for the use of American military power that relied on the deployment of overwhelmi­ng force and a clear and defined exit strategy from conflict.

Powell held the Joint Chiefs of Staff position into the Clinton administra­tion, where he recalled arguments with Cabinet members over military interventi­on in the Balkans, which Powell believed was unwise.

“I thought I would have an aneurysm,” Powell wrote in a memoir about a White House incident in which then-U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Madeleine Albright asked what good the armed forces are if they were never used. Powell ended up succeeding Albright as secretary of state in 2001.

And while his military career

had taken him from the minefields of Vietnam to West Germany’s strategic Fulda Gap, it was his role as secretary of state in wartime that almost did him in.

Powell was the first of President George W. Bush’s Cabinet members to publicly blame Osama bin Laden for the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks and the first of Bush’s top national security aides to visit Pakistan, just a month later, to make clear to the Pakistanis that they must join the U.S.-led coalition or be labelled an enemy.

Amid significan­t security concerns in the aftermath of 9/11, Powell flew to Islamabad, his plane blacked-out as it went into a corkscrew landing to avoid potential rocket strikes, to tell thenPakist­ani President Pervez Musharraf that his support in the operation to avenge the attacks

was non-negotiable. It worked, at least in the short-term.

Powell was personally skeptical of the 2003 Iraq invasion and cautioned against the war privately. But he dutifully presented the administra­tion’s case for invasion not only in diplomatic meetings with his counterpar­ts but also in the now-infamous speech before the U.N. Security Council in February 2003.

Confronted with widespread doubts about the accuracy of the American and British assessment of Saddam’s capabiliti­es and intentions, many compared the stakes of Powell’s speech to be similar to those of former United Nations Ambassador Adlai Stevenson’s electrifyi­ng 1962 presentati­on to the council about the Soviet Union’s placement of missiles in Cuba.

In Powell’s speech — which he would later call a “blot” on his record — he brandished a vial that he said could have contained anthrax that intelligen­ce agencies insisted Saddam was producing in mass quantities.

“Less than a teaspoon of dry anthrax, a little bit — about this

amount,” he told the council, waving the vial. “This is just about the amount of a teaspoon. Less than a teaspoonfu­l of dry anthrax in an envelope shut down the United States Senate in the fall of 2001.”

Some, including several critics of the Bush administra­tion, believed Powell had hit the mark, but unlike Stevenson 41 years earlier, whatever convincing he accomplish­ed was quickly erased.

No anthrax or, in fact, any weapons of mass destructio­n were found in Iraq after the end of the war, which led to a protracted U.S. military occupation of the country that many believe resulted in a broader destabiliz­ation of the Middle East, including the rise of the Islamic State, that persists to this day.

While he will always be associated with the Iraq War, Powell was not an unaccompli­shed diplomat. He oversaw the resolution of the Bush administra­tion’s first foreign policy crisis, China’s force down of a Navy spy plane and the detention of its crew, and self-deprecatin­gly referred to successes in resolving a spat with Moscow over a Russian ban on U.S. chicken imports and an armed dispute between Morocco and Spain over a small Mediterran­ean island.

Powell was also critical in engineerin­g an end to a standoff be

tween Israel then Palestinia­n leader Yasser Arafat who had been blockaded in his Ramallah headquarte­rs by Israeli troops during the second “intifada” or Palestinia­n uprising. And he was the first senior U.S. official to visit

Afghanista­n after the Taliban were ousted, flying into Kabul on a military plane in Jan. 2002, to meet with then-President Hamid Karzai.

Nonetheles­s, Powell’s biggest legacy at the State Department may be bureaucrat­ic rather than diplomatic. A natural tinkerer who loved to collect and repair old Volvos and was a fan of the thennew Chrysler PT Cruiser, Powell pushed to bring the department’s antiquated computer and communicat­ions systems into the age of email and interopera­bility.

He fought budget battles to increase diplomatic spending and hiring and also led a successful drive to prevent the newly establishe­d Department of Homeland Security from entirely taking over the process of issuing visas, something that had been recommende­d in the wake of 9/11.

Unlike his predecesso­rs and several successors as secretary of state, Powell was not enamored of foreign travel and spent less time overseas than almost any of America’s top diplomats since the dawn of the jet age, an aversion perhaps exacerbate­d by his unsuccessf­ul behind-the-scenes attempts in Washington to blunt his Bush administra­tion colleagues’ push for war with Iraq.

Personable and often approachab­le, Powell sought to assure his new employees that he would not be a burden on them in some of his first remarks to the diplomatic corps.

“I will be around to see you in due course,” he told his first town hall meeting. “I am an easy visitor. We are going to try to make it very easy for me to visit. Just to save a lot of cable traffic, I have no food preference­s, no drink preference­s. A cheeseburg­er will be fine. I like Holiday Inns, I have no illusions.”

 ?? ?? President George Bush loans his glasses to first lady Barbara Bush as she pins a Medal of Freedom on Gen. Colin Powell, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, during a White House ceremony, July 3, 1991.
President George Bush loans his glasses to first lady Barbara Bush as she pins a Medal of Freedom on Gen. Colin Powell, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, during a White House ceremony, July 3, 1991.
 ?? ?? In this May 21, 2001, file photo, Secretary of State Colin Powell talks with reporters during a news conference at the Department of State in Washington.
In this May 21, 2001, file photo, Secretary of State Colin Powell talks with reporters during a news conference at the Department of State in Washington.
 ?? ?? U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell points to a reporter during a news conference outside of the United Nations Security Council Chambers, Friday, March 7, 2003.
U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell points to a reporter during a news conference outside of the United Nations Security Council Chambers, Friday, March 7, 2003.
 ?? ?? U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell speaks during a news conference at the United Nations headquarte­rs Friday, Sept. 26, 2003.
U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell speaks during a news conference at the United Nations headquarte­rs Friday, Sept. 26, 2003.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, left, and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Gen. Colin Powell, huddle prior to testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Thursday, Feb. 21, 1991 on Capitol Hill in Washington.
Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, left, and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Gen. Colin Powell, huddle prior to testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Thursday, Feb. 21, 1991 on Capitol Hill in Washington.
 ?? ?? Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, right, and Gen. Colin Powell, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, speak to members of the 354th Tactical Fighter Wing from Myrtle Beach, S.C. at their air base in Saudi Arabia Friday, Dec. 12, 1990.
Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, right, and Gen. Colin Powell, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, speak to members of the 354th Tactical Fighter Wing from Myrtle Beach, S.C. at their air base in Saudi Arabia Friday, Dec. 12, 1990.
 ?? ?? In this Feb. 5, 2003 file photo, Secretary of State Colin Powell holds up a vial he said could contain anthrax as he presents evidence of Iraq's alleged weapons programs to the United Nations Security Council.
In this Feb. 5, 2003 file photo, Secretary of State Colin Powell holds up a vial he said could contain anthrax as he presents evidence of Iraq's alleged weapons programs to the United Nations Security Council.
 ?? ?? In this Nov. 30, 2006 file photo, former Secretary of State Colin Powell looks on during a ceremony for the Alexis de Tocquevill­e prize, a French literary award, in Tocquevill­e, east of Cherbourg, western France.
In this Nov. 30, 2006 file photo, former Secretary of State Colin Powell looks on during a ceremony for the Alexis de Tocquevill­e prize, a French literary award, in Tocquevill­e, east of Cherbourg, western France.

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