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Posts Tagged ‘Charles Krauthammer’

Woe to America’s allies

by Mojambo ( 114 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Iran, Israel, Japan, Joe Biden, Russia, South Korea at December 9th, 2013 - 9:04 am

As an Israeli Deputy Prime Minister recently stated (paraphrasing) “We have 2 1/2 more years of Obama, we need to hold out and then he will be gone”.

by Charles Krauthammer

Three crises, one president, many bewildered friends.

The first crisis, barely noticed here, is Ukraine’s sudden turn away from Europe and back to the Russian embrace.

After years of negotiations for a major trading agreement with the European Union, Ukraine succumbed to characteristically blunt and brutal economic threats from Russia and abruptly walked away. Ukraine is instead considering joining the Moscow-centered Customs Union with Russia’s fellow dictatorships Belarus and Kazakhstan.

This is no trivial matter. Ukraine is not just the largest European country, it’s the linchpin for Vladimir Putin’s dream of a renewed imperial Russia, hegemonic in its neighborhood and rolling back the quarter-century advancement of the “Europe whole and free” bequeathed by America’s victory in the Cold War.

The U.S. response? Almost imperceptible. As with Iran’s ruthlessly crushed Green Revolution of 2009, the hundreds of thousands of protesters who’ve turned out to reverse this betrayal of Ukrainian independence have found no voice in Washington. Can’t this administration even rhetorically support those seeking a democratic future, as we did during Ukraine’s Orange Revolution of 2004?

A Post online headline explains: “With Russia in mind, U.S. takes cautious approach on Ukraine unrest.” We must not offend Putin. We must not jeopardize Obama’s precious “reset,” a farce that has yielded nothing but the well-earned distrust of allies such as Poland and the Czech Republicwhom we wantonly undercut in a vain effort to appease Russia on missile defense.

[……]

The second crisis is the Middle East — the collapse of confidence of U.S. allies as America romances Iran.

The Gulf Arabs are stunned at their double abandonment. In the nuclear negotiations with Iran, the U.S. has overthrown seven years of Security Council resolutions prohibiting uranium enrichment and effectively recognized Iran as a threshold nuclear state. This follows our near-abandonment of the Syrian revolution and de facto recognition of both the Assad regime and Iran’s “Shiite Crescent” of client states stretching to the Mediterranean.

Equally dumbfounded are the Israelis, now trapped by an agreement designed less to stop the Iranian nuclear program than to prevent the Israeli Air Force from stopping the Iranian nuclear program.

[……..]

Better diplomacy than war, say Obama’s apologists, an adolescent response implying that all diplomacy is the same, as if a diplomacy of capitulation is no different from a diplomacy of pressure.

What to do? Apply pressure. Congress should immediately pass punishing new sanctions to be implemented exactly six months hence — when the current interim accord is supposed to end — if the Iranians have not lived up to the agreement and refuse to negotiate a final deal that fully liquidates their nuclear weapons program.

The third crisis is unfolding over the East China Sea, where, in open challenge to Obama’s “pivot to Asia,” China has brazenly declared a huge expansion of its airspace into waters claimed by Japan and South Korea.

Obama’s first response — sending B-52s through that airspace without acknowledging the Chinese — was quick and firm. Japan and South Korea followed suit. But when Japan then told its civilian carriers not to comply with Chinese demands for identification, the State Department (and FAA) told U.S. air carriers to submit.

[……]

Again leaving our friends stunned. They need an ally, not an intermediary. Here is the U.S. again going over the heads of allies to accommodate a common adversary. We should be declaring the Chinese claim null and void, ordering our commercial airlines to join Japan in acting accordingly, and supplying them with joint military escorts if necessary.

This would not be an exercise in belligerence but a demonstration that if other countries unilaterally overturn the status quo, they will meet a firm, united, multilateral response from the West.

Led by us. From in front.

No one’s asking for a JFK-like commitment to “bear any burden” to “assure the . . . success of liberty.” Or a Reaganesque tearing down of walls. Or even a Clintonian assertion of America as the indispensable nation. America’s allies are seeking simply a reconsideration of the policy of retreat that marks this administration’s response to red-line challenges all over the world — and leaves them naked.

Read the rest – Woe to U.S. Allies

Listen Closely My Fellow Snowflakes, And Rejoice!

by Flyovercountry ( 122 Comments › )
Filed under Communism, Marxism, Progressives at November 14th, 2013 - 12:00 pm

Political Cartoons by Steve Breen

Heading into the Obama Regime, (and yes you leftists our there who may be reading this, I mean for the word regime to be taken in the same tone as any government headed by a tin pot dictator,) we, meaning all of us on the political right, knew or should have known that there were two distinct Lefty wet dreams which would be used to inflict total bureaucratic hell on Earth, for anyone who appreciated freedom and a constrained federal government. One of them was Cap and Trade, which is just the tip of the environmentalist iceberg in which, “Global Warming,” would be the Hammer and Sickle used to bludgeon us into economic impoverishment. The other wet dream that the Leftists had of course was Universal Health Care. This is the law that gives the feds permission to peak into every single nook and cranny of your life and unilaterally decide for you what freedoms you will be allowed to keep, and which ones could be stripped away. The gun grab would eventually be made successfully through Obamacare, or its descendant, what ever form that nightmare would eventually take.

In case I soft peddled yesterday’s post, I wish to nail it home today. Our opportunity here is huge. While we on the right are having our well deserved, and by the way completely necessary civil war, the nightmare inflicted upon us by the political left, (which they were able to accomplish because they win elections and we do not,) is imploding, and it is doing so in spectacular fashion. Many of us on the right predicted this implosion, not because of some psychic ability possessed, but because of our understanding of the laws of economics, which by the way happen to be spot freaking on. While we bicker and argue over who is a conservative and who is not, and whether tactics should trump principled stands or the other way around, the left is seeing the utter failure of their signature accomplishment, and receiving the unbridled disdain of those upon whom they’ve inflicted it. They will one day fix the technology, that is inevitable. They will never be able to fix the law itself, as this was always the endgame.

The arguments going forward from their crowd are about to get silly. “We can’t get the toothpaste back into the tube.” “It’s the republicans fault for allowing us to do this completely on our own.” “The insurance companies are to blame because they never told us how their industry worked.” “Anyone who makes some sort of profit is greedy.” We just need to tweak the law a little, so that the damage it inflicts can be spread out over a longer period of time.” One thing is certain however, and that is that when people want a commodity or service, they will find a way to get it, and when that market exists, others will provide it. Now that the Democrats have effectively made future health care and enjoyable living illegal, (it’s just a matter of time before Kathleen Sebelius figures out how to write the rules to accomplish this,) a black market for both will certainly appear.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, that wonderful economic model being followed so perfectly by Barack Obama today, we learned two things. One, they had a thriving black market for just about everything. Two, the collapse was caused by their complete lack of economic capability, and had almost nothing to do with any military endeavor or effort within the world of intelligence gathering operations. Reagan won the Cold War in Iceland during the first days of his Presidency, not by striking some sort of genius strategic blow, but by refusing to shackle our own economic progress for the benefit of the Soviets. They wanted us to stop with the SDI, not because they were afraid of what it might do to them, but because of what it would prevent them from doing to us. Economically, they could not keep up, and they lacked the resources to accomplish the simple task of feeding their own. Their economic model, after 80 years, forced mass starvation upon their entire population. It would have been much sooner had we not been shipping them most of their grain from the mid 60’s onward.

Looking at that model, and realizing that this is the path that the Bamster is following, no matter how much the press proclaims him to be a, “centrist,” this end to their wet dream is the only possible outcome. People will follow soaring platitudinous rhetoric only until they face the consequences of that soaring platitudinous rhetoric. As Chuck Knoll once responded to a reporter who asked him what kind of motivational speeches he gave before games, “I don’t give any speeches, they are a waste of time. As soon as a guy gets knocked on his ass, the speech is forgotten.” What Obamacare now represents, in more than purely symbolic terms, is America and about 150 Million of her citizens getting knocked on their collective,
(pun intended,) asses.

Charles Krauthammer has a unique take on all of this, and I partially agree with what he has to say, and I partially disagree. While I do share his optimism with the fact that what we are witnessing here, whether it’s the Dems or the GOP who gain control in the future, is the end of liberalism. That sad little theory of economics and governance has done the only thing that it has ever really been capable of accomplishing, and that is suicide. Whether the body is dead or not yet is immaterial. It will be, and what finally killed it was allowing it to have its own way. By the way, that’s what also killed the Soviet Version, 32 years ago.

What I disagree with is Krauthammer’s assertion that we not proceed with our current fight amongst ourselves, which I have been looking forward to for the better part of 8 years now. By the way, for all of you who will doubtless accuse Dr. Krauthammer of being a Rino, bear in mind that he states plainly that he agrees with the substance of what Ted Cruz and Mike Lee attempted, just not the tactics that they used. Maybe I’m just spit balling here, but perhaps we should allow him to stay in our tent after all. Chasing the Dr. K’s out is the only sure fire way to insure we never win those all too important elections in the future.

 

Cross Posted from Musings of a Mad Conservative.

Friday with the ‘hammer: Republicans should have fought over the debt ceiling, not Obamacare funding

by Phantom Ace ( 113 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Republican Party at October 4th, 2013 - 12:00 pm

I know many disagree with my view that the Republicans by trying to defund Obamcare fell into Obama’s trap. For months Ted Cruz was telegraphing that he was going to rally Republicans for a showdown over Obamacare. This was the type of fight the Obama Regime and their Media cohorts wanted. The NSA spying scandal and his attempts to start a war in Syria, was doing him political damage. Now thanks to Government Shutdown Obama has the Republican Party as the perfect strawman to beat up on.

The fight the GOP should have had was the debt ceiling. The American public by a 2-1 margin were against raising the debt ceiling, without cuts. That is an issue the Republicans could have won on. Instead led by emotionalism, the Republican Party went right into the trap the Obama Regime and their media allies laid.

The mainstream media have been fairly unanimous in blaming the government shutdown on the GOP. Accordingly, House Republicans presented three bills to restore funding to national parks, veterans and the District of Columbia government. Democrats voted down all three. (For procedural reasons, the measures required a two-thirds majority.)

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid won’t even consider these refunding measures. And the White House has promised a presidential veto.

The reason is obvious: to prolong the pain and thus add to the political advantage gained from a shutdown blamed on the GOP. They are confident the media will do a “GOP makes little Johnny weep at the closed gates of Yellowstone, film at 11” despite Republicans having just offered legislation to open them.

[….]

I don’t agree with current Republican tactics. I thought the defunding demand impossible and, therefore, foolish. I thought that if, nonetheless, the GOP insisted on making a stand, it should not be on shutting down the government, which voters oppose 5-to-1, but on the debt ceiling, which Americans favor 2-to-1 as a vehicle for restraining government.

The Republicans picked a fight on Obamacare funding the Obama Regime wanted over the debt ceiling, a fight they could have won. To make matters worse, John Boehner is now prepared to cave on the debt ceiling.

WASHINGTON — Speaker John A. Boehner has privately told Republican lawmakers anxious about fallout from the government shutdown that he would not allow a potentially more crippling federal default as the atmosphere on Capitol Hill turned increasingly tense on Thursday.

Mr. Boehner’s comments, recounted by multiple lawmakers, that he would use a combination of Republican and Democratic votes to increase the federal debt limit if necessary appeared aimed at reassuring his colleagues — and nervous financial markets — that he did not intend to let the economic crisis spiral further out of control.

Once again, Republican voters have been played. John Boehner goes along with a losing fight, over a fight they could have won. If this is not evidence the GOP is the stupid party that has no strategic thinking I don’t know what is. I know people will  view me as the bad guy or RINO for disagreeing with the Conservative conventional wisdom, that Republicans are winning on the showdown and this was brilliant of  Republicans. But it is my responsibility to tell the readers of this blog the truth of the political situation.

Now that the milk has been spilled, crying over it will change nothing. The Republican Party needs to hold firm. If it means keeping the governmnet shutdown for months so be it. They should not cave on the debt ceiling either. John Boehner needs to be read the riot act on this. The Republicans need to damage Obama as much as possible, so it becomes a draw, that is the only way out of this trap

Republican internal divisons; and the myth of an isolationist GOP

by Mojambo ( 73 Comments › )
Filed under Cold War, Egypt, History, World War II at August 9th, 2013 - 8:30 am

Dr. K. is wrong on this. Democrats (as Jonah points out) in the 1930’s were just as isolationist as Republicans. I do agree with him though that taking back the Senate and the presidency is the only way to go and shutting down the government would  be a bonanza for Obama and that closing down the government would be suicidal.

by Charles Krauthammer

WASHINGTON — A combination of early presidential maneuvering and internal policy debate is feeding yet another iteration of that media perennial: the great Republican crackup. This time it’s tea-party insurgents versus get-along establishment fogies fighting principally over two things: national security and Obamacare.

National security

Gov. Chris Christie recently challenged Sen. Rand Paul over his opposition to the National Security Agency metadata program. Paul has also tangled with Sen. John McCain and other internationalists over drone warfare, democracy promotion and, more generally, intervention abroad.

So what else is new? The return of the most venerable strain of conservative foreign policy — isolationism — was utterly predictable. GOP isolationists dominated until Pearl Harbor and then acquiesced to an activist internationalism during the Cold War because of a fierce detestation of communism.

With communism gone, the conservative coalition should have fractured long ago. This was delayed by 9/11 and the rise of radical Islam. But now, 12 years into that era — after Afghanistan and Iraq, after drone wars and the NSA revelations — the natural tension between isolationist and internationalist tendencies has resurfaced.

[……..]

The more fundamental GOP divide is over foreign aid and other manifestations of our role as the world’s leading power. The Paulites, pining for the splendid isolation of the 19th century, want to leave the world alone on the assumption that it will then leave us alone.

Which rests on the further assumption that international stability — open sea lanes, free commerce, relative tranquility — comes naturally, like the air we breathe. If only that were true. Unfortunately, stability is not a matter of grace. It comes about only by Great Power exertion.

In the 19th century, that meant the British navy, behind whose protection America thrived. Today, alas, Britannia rules no waves. World order is maintained by American power and American will. Take that away and you don’t get tranquility. You get chaos.

That’s the Christie/McCain position. They figure that America doesn’t need two parties of retreat. Paul’s views, more measured and moderate than his fringy father’s, are still in the minority among conservatives, but gathering strength.  […….]

Obamacare

The other battle is about defunding Obamacare. Led by Sens. Mike Lee and Ted Cruz, the GOP insurgents are threatening to shut down the government on Oct. 1 if the stopgap funding bill contains money for Obamacare.

This is nuts. The president will never sign a bill defunding the singular achievement of his presidency. Especially when he has control of the Senate. Especially when, though a narrow majority (51 percent) of Americans disapprove of Obamacare, only 36 percent favor repeal. President Obama so knows he’ll win any shutdown showdown that he’s practically goading the Republicans into trying.

Never make a threat on which you are not prepared to deliver. Every fiscal showdown has redounded against the Republicans. The first, in 1995, effectively marked the end of the Gingrich revolution. The latest, last December, led to a last-minute Republican cave that humiliated the GOP and did nothing to stop the tax hike it so strongly opposed.

Those who fancy themselves tea-party patriots fighting a sold-out cocktail-swilling establishment are demanding yet another cliff dive as a show of principle and manliness.

But there’s no principle at stake here. This is about tactics. [……]

As for manliness, the real question here is sanity. Nothing could better revive the fortunes of a failing, flailing, fading Democratic administration than a government shutdown where the president is portrayed as standing up to the GOP on honoring our debts and paying our soldiers in the field.

How many times must we learn the lesson? You can’t govern from one house of Congress. You need to win back the Senate and then the presidency. Shutting down the government is the worst possible way to get there. Indeed, it’s Obama’s fondest hope for a Democratic recovery.

Read the rest –  On healing the GOP

Jonah demolishes the myth that the GOP alone was isolationist in the run up to World war II.

by Jonah Goldberg

They’re back! The isolationist poltergeists that forever haunt the Republican Party. Or so we’re told.

In July, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) had a set-to over American foreign policy. Christie clumsily denounced “this strain of libertarianism that’s going through parties right now and making big headlines I think is a very dangerous thought.” It was clumsy in its garbled syntax but also in its ill-considered shot at “libertarianism.” What he meant to say, I think, was “isolationist,” and that is the term a host of commentators on the left and right are using to describe Paul and his ideas.  [………]

I’m not so sure. Last week, Paul introduced a measure to cut off foreign aid to Egypt. After some lively and enlightening debate, Paul’s amendment went down in flames 86 to 13. And, as the Washington Post’s Dana Milbank noted, that margin was misleading given that six senators, including Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), sided with Paul only when they knew he would lose the vote. […….]

[………]

In other words, rumors that the GOP is returning to its isolationist roots are wildly exaggerated.

In fact, rumors that the GOP’s roots were ever especially isolationist are exaggerated too.

Republicans first got tagged with the isolationist label when Massachusetts Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge led the opposition to the Treaty of Versailles after World War I. But his opposition to a stupid treaty in the wake of a misguided war wasn’t necessarily grounded in isolationist sentiment. Lodge was an interventionist hawk on both WWI and the Spanish-American War. Lodge even agreed to ratify President Wilson’s other treaty, which would have committed the U.S. to defend France if it were attacked by Germany.

Or consider the famously isolationist Sen. Robert Taft (R-Ohio), a role model of former Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas). As a presidential candidate, Paul routinely touted Taft’s opposition to U.S. membership to NATO as proof of the GOP’s isolationist roots. But Taft also supported the Truman Doctrine and, albeit reluctantly, the Marshall Plan. He promised “100 percent support for the Chinese National government on Formosa [Taiwan],” and wanted to station up to six divisions in Europe. What an isolationist!

Meanwhile, countless leading liberals and Democrats embraced isolationism by name in the 1930s and deed after World War II. J.T. Flynn, the foremost spokesman for the America First Committee, for example, was a longtime columnist for the liberal New Republic.

The self-avowed isolationist movement died in the ashes of World War II. But while it lived it was a bipartisan cause, just like interventionism. Similarly, the competing impulses to engage the world and to draw back from it aren’t the exclusive provenance of a single party; rather they run straight through the American heart.  [……..] Even most hawks preferred a cold war to a hot one with the Soviet Union. And most doves supported striking back against al-Qaeda after 9/11.

Many supposedly isolationist libertarians are for free trade and easy immigration but also want to shrink the military. Many supposedly isolationist progressives hate free trade and globalization but love the United Nations and international treaties.

Krauthammer is absolutely right that the GOP is going to have a big foreign policy debate — and it should (as should the Democrats). I’m just not sure bandying around the I-word will improve or illuminate that debate very much.

Read the rest – Isolation versus intervention is a bipartisan debate