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May 18, 2007
Today's Wall Street Journal editorial addresses the World Bank's cashiering of Paul Wolfowitz while clearing him of ethical misconduct. The Journal derives lessons from the events: There have been plenty of outrages in the bank's treatment of Mr. Wolfowitz, but for sheer chutzpah nothing exceeds the argument of last week's report by the investigating committee of the board that he had put the institution "in a bad and unfair light" by daring to defend himself publicly against selective and false media leaks designed to smear him. Had Mr. Wolfowitz taken that advice, he would have been out on his ear without so much as the benefit of the formal acquittal he has now received.The New York Times discredits Wolfowitz's exoneration by the bank board, "most" of whom "by all accounts" anonymously disavows their own statement: By all accounts, the terms of Mr. Wolfowitz’s exoneration left a bitter taste with most of the 24 board members, who represent major donor countries, as well as clusters of smaller donor and recipient countries. Most had wanted to adopt the findings of the special board committee that determined he had acted unethically on the matter of Ms. Riza.The Times story by itself deserves a Journal editorial by itself, though perhaps the appropriate response is provided by the editorial's conclusion that "the core task of Mr. Wolfowitz's successor should be to clean the World Bank stables, or shut it down." |