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Top Neocon Max Boot: Obama 'Continuing and Expanding' Bush's Foreign Policy

Posted by Jeremy Scahill, AlterNet at 7:50 AM on March 30, 2009.


In his latest love letter to Obama, Boot calls his Afghanistan plan "all that supporters of the war effort could have asked for."
obamakarzai

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This post originally appeared in PEEK.

I feel like this story can be written pretty much any time President Obama makes any major foreign policy announcement. It happened shortly after the election when Obama unveiled his foreign policy team and the neocons and other Republicans sang his praises. It happened with his Iraq plan, when some of his most vocal fans were the likes of John McCain and Mitch McConnell. Now, Obama’s Afghanistan surge is the subject of a love letter from neocon heavy-hitter and former McCain adviser Max Boot. Writing for Commentary, Boot said Obama’s Afghanistan approach “was pretty much all that supporters of the war effort could have asked for, and probably pretty similar to what a President McCain would have decided on.”
Boot wrote:

It would be nice if Obama had spoken a bit more positively about the outcome in Iraq now that that it has become, like Afghanistan, “his” war.
But that’s a minor quibble about rhetoric. The substance of policy is more important, and on that ground Obama is solid.
The big news -- though it had been apparent for some time -- is that Obama is eschewing those who argue for a major downsizing of our efforts to focus on a narrow counter-terrorism strategy of simply picking off individual bad guys. Instead, Obama is embracing a more wide-ranging counterinsurgency strategy focused on enhancing “the military, governance, and economic capacity of Afghanistan and Pakistan.”

To cap it all off, Boot said Obama is “essentially continuing and expanding [Bush’s foreign] policy.”

In another recent post about Obama’s dropping of the term “Global War on Terror,” Boot wrote, “the Obama administration’s change of nomenclature for the Global War on Terrorism is less important than its willingness to continue most of the actions the Bush administration took to fight the terrorists.”

As I have said before, it really seems like the most substantive foreign policy changes we are seeing under Obama, unfortunately, are the words he uses to define his belligerent, Bush-esque policies.

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Tagged as: neocons, iraq, afghanistan, war on terror, barack obama, john mccain, pakistan, mitch mcconnell, max boot, commentary

Jeremy Scahill is the author of Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army.


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