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Obama
Unbound
By Victor Davis Hanson
Nov 10, 2011
Richard
Nixon went to Red China with
political impunity. Had a Democrat tried that, he would have been
branded a
commie appeaser.
To
this day, liberals cannot conceive
that during the two world wars, progressives like Woodrow Wilson, Earl
Warren
and Franklin Delano Roosevelt trampled on civil liberties in a way
unimagined
by Dick Cheney.
Ronald
Reagan signed the most liberal
illegal immigration amnesty bill in history, and ran larger yearly
deficits
than had Jimmy Carter. “Read my lips” George H.W. Bush agreed to huge
tax
increases. And George W. Bush ran up the largest debt of any eight-year
president, outspending Bill Clinton by more than fivefold. The latter,
remember, bombed Belgrade without either congressional or United
Nations
approval -- and without antiwar protests. Without an opposition, almost
anything goes.
In
other words, right-wing presidents
can sometimes act left-wing, and left-wing presidents can act
right-wing -- to
the embarrassed silence of their respective bases, but to the private
delight
of their green-light opponents.
We
have no better examples of that
irony than our two most recent presidents. George W. Bush was still
damned as
an uncaring reactionary by the Left even as he pushed for big
government and
unfunded entitlements like No Child Left Behind and Medicare
prescription drug
coverage. Barack Obama was alleged to be squishy about hunting down
terrorists,
even as he increased targeted assassinations tenfold and found plenty
of
opportunistic former legal critics of Bush’s national-security
protocols to
write justifications for them.
In
terms of the Obama presidency,
there is now no antiwar movement. It simply vanished in January 2009.
Former
outrages like Guantanamo, renditions and Predator drone assassinations
almost
magically became A-OK. The left-wing base dared not continue its old
Bush
slurs, given its support for Obama’s liberal domestic agenda. Quiet
conservatives were perplexed over whether to be outraged that
Predator-in-Chief
Obama proved to be such an abject hypocrite, or relieved that, better
late than
never, he had morphed into a Bush-Cheney national-security disciple.
The
result is that for the next year
or so, Obama can more or less do whatever he wishes abroad. If he
chooses to
bomb a country that poses no direct threat to the U.S. without
congressional
authority, like Libya, or to assassinate a U.S. citizen-terrorist, like
Anwar
al-Awlaki, the Left will keep mum. And the Right, for different
reasons,
probably will, too.
What,
then, should we expect abroad in
the waning months of Obama’s four-year term, with continuing economic
bad news
at home?
Suddenly,
intelligence agencies at the
U.N., and in the U.S. and Europe -- after once denying, during the
supposedly
trigger-happy Bush administration, that Iran was close to getting a
bomb -- now
warn us that Teheran may actually test a nuclear weapon after all. Iran
poses
an existential threat not only to Israel, but to the entire notion of
nuclear
nonproliferation in the key oil-exporting Gulf. Its missiles could
reach
southern Europe.
If
we get to a scary point of Iran
going nuclear in 2012, expect the Obama administration -- up for
re-election
and without much of a domestic record to run on in these hard times --
to
consider a preemptive strike. Be assured that if it does, there will be
no
outrage in the Democrat-controlled Senate, no campuses on fire, no ad
hominem
Moveon.org ads in the New York Times -- all the sorts of antiwar
hysteria that
once sought to turn a moderate like George W. Bush into a caricature of
some
trigger-happy yokel from shoot-’em-up Texas.
And
conservatives? Again, they would
mumble that an Obama “wag-the-dog” strike would cynically be all about
the
president’s re-election. Or they would at least note the irony, given
the Nobel
Laureate-in-Chief’s prior demonization of Bush’s use of military force.
Nonetheless, Republicans would largely grow silent if -- a big if -- a
strike
were successful and ended Iran’s nuclear threat.
The
truth is that the more the Obama
administration floats silly symbolic trial balloons like supporting a
Ground
Zero mosque, trying Khalid Sheik Mohammed in a Manhattan civilian
court, or
employing inane euphemisms like “overseas contingency operations” and
“man-caused disasters” in the context of radical Islamic terrorism, the
more it
will try to assassinate foes such as Ayman al-Zawahiri, sidekick of the
late
Osama bin Laden, or consider, in Libyan fashion, giving a greater push
to
Syrian rebels.
I
am not suggesting that bombing Iran
is imminent or even wise, only that it is now far more likely than
during the
tenure of the Bush administration.
That’s
just a fact, given the weird
paradoxes of American presidential politics.
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