Alan
Caruba
On June 12, 1987, the President of the United States, Ronald Reagan, speaking in
Berlin, said, "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall." It fell in 1989 and, in
1991, the Soviet Union collapsed. From the end of World War Two in 1945, the
United States had stood strong against the Communist empire's effort to extend
its power and influence around the world.
Today, however, we have a
President who not only swapped five Taliban generals, men whom the United
Nations regards as war criminals, but likely also paid a yet unreported ransom
as well. We have a President who made it clear that he intended to close
Guantanamo where jihadist enemies have been detained because he thinks the
United States is provoking the Islamic fanatics by maintaining
it.
President Obama's mindset is so favorable to Islam that he seemingly
cannot grasp that jihad is a sacred duty for Muslims and nothing the U.S. or any
other nation does will cause their holy war to end. Or maybe he does understand
that and his true sympathies are with the growing army of Islamists?
The
Rand Corporation, a think tank, recently released a report noting the
accelerating rate of jihadist groups worldwide and the number of jihadist
fighters which it estimates at 100,000. The number of attacks by al Qaeda
affiliates between 2010 and 2013 rose to approximately one thousand from an
initial 392.
The five Taliban generals were sent to Qatar, a small Arab
state that borders Saudi Arabia, with the understanding they would remain there
for a year. That is unlikely. Muslims are permitted to lie to infidels to
advance Islam and jihad. The practice is call taqqiya. I have little doubt we
will see them return to Afghanistan and Pakistan, both of which are still home
to al Qaeda and allied groups such as Lashkar-e-Taiba and the Taliban.
At
the heart of the deal struck to get the return of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, a deserter
from his unit in Afghanistan, bespeaks the utter weakness of American foreign
policy that has been the hallmark of the Obama administration. In a recent
commentary,"Meet
Obama's Kissingers,"Wall Street Journal columnist, Kimberly A. Strassel,
spelled out the alarming fact that Obama's key national security and foreign
affairs advisors are all politicians as opposed to experts in those respective
fields.
Presidents dating back to Harry Truman who initiated the National
Security Council have relied on it for decision-making, but Obama's first
advisor, Marine General and NATO Commander, Jim Jones, left after just two years
"following clashes with Mr. Obama's inner circle." Today, the most visible
member of the NSC is Susan Rice who has established a reputation for appearing
on Sunday television news programs to lie about the cause of the 2012 Benghazi
attack and now the character of Sgt. Bergdahl.
Obama has never made a
secret of the fact that he wanted U.S. troops out of Iraq and is looking forward
to removing them from Afghanistan. It is true that Americans had grown weary of
these long military engagements. Even the ancient Romans felt the same way in
their time. The Iraq withdrawal has left behind a nation besieged with bombing
attacks in its major cities that are ceding control to the Iraqi branch of al
Qaeda and Afghanistan will return to the horrors of Taliban control once our
troops are gone.
There are times when a President must use his powers as
Commander-in-Chief to demonstrate that those who kill Americans or pose a
significant threat must be reminded of our power. Reagan did this in Libya with
a bombing that got the attention of its dictator Muamar Gaddafi and Clinton did
this with a strike against a suspected chemical weapons facility in Sudan.
Obama's weapon of choice has been armed drones, but his use of them against al
Qaeda leaders has diminished to zero since last December.
It was not lost
on anyone that the Iranians released captive American diplomats the day Ronald
Reagan was first sworn into office. They knew this was a President who would
respond in ways that would make them pay for this outrage. As he once said, "Of
the four wars in my lifetime, none came about because the U.S. was too
strong."
Obama, by contrast, exudes weakness. His speech at West Point
was universally deemed an ineffectual response to the realities of the threats
the U.S and its allies face around the world.
At one point he told the
graduating cadets, "But as I said last year, in taking direct action we must
uphold standards that reflect our values. That means taking strikes only when we
face a continuing, imminent threat and only where there is no certainty – there
is near certainty of no civilian casualties. For our actions should meet a
simple test: We must not create more enemies than we take off the
battlefield."
In reality, a nation creates enemies when they feel they
can triumph against it. A strong nation creates caution.
I began with a
Reagan quote and will conclude with one.
"It was leadership here at home
that gave us strong American influence abroad, and the collapse of imperial
Communism. Great nations have responsibilities to lead, and we should always be
cautious of those who would lower our profile, because they might just wind up
lowering our flag." – February 3, 1994.
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