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Obama's Sweeping Foreign Policy Critique

By Spencer Ackerman, The American Prospect. Posted March 28, 2008.


Democrats should not have to act like Republicans to pass some test on national security. It's time to end the politics of fear.
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When Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama met in California for the Jan. 31 debate, their back-and-forth resembled their many previous encounters, with the Democratic presidential hopefuls scrambling for the small policy yardage between them. And then Obama said something about the Iraq War that wasn't incremental at all. "I don't want to just end the war," he said, "but I want to end the mind-set that got us into war in the first place."

Until this point in the primaries, Clinton and Obama had sounded very similar on this issue. Despite their differences in the past (Obama opposed the war, while Clinton voted for it), both were calling for major troop withdrawals, with some residual force left behind to hedge against catastrophe. But Obama's concise declaration of intent at the debate upended this assumption. Clinton stumbled to find a counterargument, eventually saying her vote in October 2002 "was not authority for a pre-emptive war." Then she questioned Obama's ability to lead, saying that the Democratic nominee must have "the necessary credentials and gravitas for commander in chief."

If Clinton's response on Iraq sounds familiar, that's because it's structurally identical to the defensive crouch John Kerry assumed in 2004: Voting against the war wasn't a mistake; the mistakes were all George W. Bush's, and bringing the war to a responsible conclusion requires a wise man or woman with military credibility. In that debate, Obama offered an alternative path. Ending the war is only the first step. After we're out of Iraq, a corrosive mind-set will still be infecting the foreign-policy establishment and the body politic. That rot must be eliminated.

Obama is offering the most sweeping liberal foreign-policy critique we've heard from a serious presidential contender in decades. It cuts to the heart of traditional Democratic timidity. "It's time to reject the counsel that says the American people would rather have someone who is strong and wrong than someone who is weak and right," Obama said in a January speech. "It's time to say that we are the party that is going to be strong and right." (The Democrat who counseled that Americans wanted someone strong and wrong, not weak and right? That was Bill Clinton in 2002.)

But to understand what Obama is proposing, it's important to ask: What, exactly, is the mind-set that led to the war? What will it mean to end it? And what will take its place?

To answer these questions, I spoke at length with Obama's foreign-policy brain trust, the advisers who will craft and implement a new global strategy if he wins the nomination and the general election. They envision a doctrine that first ends the politics of fear and then moves beyond a hollow, sloganeering "democracy promotion" agenda in favor of "dignity promotion," to fix the conditions of misery that breed anti-Americanism and prevent liberty, justice, and prosperity from taking root. An inextricable part of that doctrine is a relentless and thorough destruction of al-Qaeda. Is this hawkish? Is this dovish? It's both and neither -- an overhaul not just of our foreign policy but of how we think about foreign policy. And it might just be the future of American global leadership.



***


When considering any presidential hopeful's foreign-policy promises, it's important to remember that what candidates say is, at best, an imperfect guide to their actions in office. What proves to be a more reliable indicator of presidential behavior is a candidate's roster of advisers. (If the press had paid better attention, the country would have seen through Bush's pitch about a humble foreign policy and realized that many of his advisers, including Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle, were conspiracy-minded warmongers.) Obama's foreign-policy advisers come from diverse backgrounds. They are former aides to Democratic mandarins like Tom Daschle and Lee Hamilton (Denis McDonough and Ben Rhodes, respectively); veterans of the Clinton administration's left flank (Tony Lake and Susan Rice); a human-rights advocate who helped write the Army's and Marine Corps' much-lauded counterinsurgency field manual (Sarah Sewall); a retired general who helped run the air war during the invasion of Iraq (Scott Gration); and a former journalist who revolutionized the study of U.S. foreign policy (Samantha Power). Yet they form a committed, intellectually coherent, and surprisingly united foreign-affairs team. (Shortly before this piece went to press, Power resigned from the campaign after making an intemperate remark to a reporter.)

They also share a formative experience with each other and with Obama. Each opposed the Iraq War at a time when doing so was derided by their colleagues, by journalists, and by the foreign-policy establishment. Each did so because they understood that the invasion and occupation ran counter to the goal of destroying al-Qaeda. And each bore the frustration of endless lectures on their lack of so-called seriousness from those who suffered from strategic myopia.

"There is a popular notion that Democrats have to try to appear like Republicans to pass some test on national security. The fact that that's still the case after Iraq is absurd," says one of Obama's closest advisers. "So you break from that orthodoxy and say 'I don't care if the Republicans attack me because I'm willing to meet with the leadership in Iran. We haven't for 25 years, and it's not gotten us anywhere.'"

Most of the members of Obama's foreign-policy team expressed frustration that they had taken a well-considered and seemingly anodyne position on Iraq and suffered for it. Obama had something similar happen to him in the spring and summer of 2007. He was attacked from the left and the right for saying three things that should not have been controversial: that if he had actionable intelligence on the whereabouts of al-Qaeda's leadership in Pakistan but no cooperation from the Pakistani government, he would take out the jihadists; that he wouldn't use nuclear weapons on terrorist training camps; and that he would be willing to meet with leaders of rogue states in his first year as president. "No one [of Obama's critics] had thought through the policy because that was the quote-unquote naïve and weak position, so they said it was a bad position to take," recalls Ben Rhodes, the adviser who writes Obama's foreign-policy speeches. "And it was a seminal moment, because Obama himself said, 'No, I'm right about this!'"


Instead of backing down, Obama asked his foreign-policy team to double down. Rhodes wrote a speech that Obama delivered at DePaul University on Oct. 2, which criticized the boundaries of acceptable discourse set by the same establishment that backed the war. "This election is about ending the Iraq War, but even more it's about moving beyond it. And we're not going to be safe in a world of unconventional threats with the same old conventional thinking that got us into Iraq," Obama said. One of his advisers, recalling the fallout from Obama's comments about pursuing al-Qaeda in Pakistan, says, "He takes policy positions that are a break from both rigid orthodoxy and the Bush administration. And everyone says it's a gaffe! That just encapsulates everything that's wrong about the foreign-policy debate in Washington and in Democratic politics."

The Obama foreign-policy team describes it as "the politics of fear," a phrase most advisers used unprompted in our conversations. "For a long time we've not seen much creative thinking from Dems on national security, because, out of fear, we want to be a little different from the Republicans but not too different, out of fear of being labeled weak or indecisive," another top adviser says. Identifying that fear as the accelerant of the Iraq War mind-set is the first step to a new and innovative foreign policy. John Kerry was not able to argue for fundamental change in foreign policy because he was consumed by that very political fear. Obama's admonition to Democrats is much like Pope John Paul II's to the Gdansk shipyard strikers -- first, be not afraid.


***


Like Obama, his defense advisers have supplemented their American views with the perspectives of outsiders. Gen. Scott Gration, a retired Air Force jet pilot, says hello to me over the phone in Swahili. He learned about the crushing misery of the world's poor by growing up in Congo, where his parents were missionaries. After the violence following Congolese independence in 1960, Gration had an experience few Americans ever will: He became a refugee. "We lost everything we owned, and what we took with us, they confiscated," he remembers.

Sarah Sewall, a Harvard professor and another of Obama's closest advisers, also knows about stepping outside of her comfort zone. A longtime human-rights advocate with the disarmament organization, the Council for a Livable World, Sewall found herself in 2005 and 2006 with an unlikely partner: Gen. David Petraeus. He and two colleagues were rewriting the Army and Marine field manual for counterinsurgency and wanted Sewall's input on how to create a more just, humane, and successful doctrine. For agreeing to help, she was attacked by some on the left. "Should a human-rights center at the nation's most prestigious university be collaborating with the top U.S. general in Iraq in designing the counterinsurgency doctrine behind the current military surge?" Tom Hayden wrote online in The Huffington Post.

Sewall's involvement may have lost her some influence within the academic left, but she has become a hero to the military's growing circle of counterinsurgency theorist-practitioners. "Her impact on the thinking about the war and the conduct of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has been significant and not without cost," says Army Lt. Col. John Nagl, one of the counterinsurgency community's luminaries. "She has shown, in my eyes, great moral courage. I think Senator Obama is listening to someone who has thought long and hard about the use of force and who understands the kinds of wars we're fighting today."

This ability to see the world from different perspectives informs what the Obama team hopes will replace the Iraq War mind-set: something they call dignity promotion. "I don't think anyone in the foreign-policy community has as much an appreciation of the value of dignity as Obama does," says Samantha Power, a former key aide and author of the groundbreaking study of U.S. foreign policy and genocide, A Problem From Hell. "Dignity is a way to unite a lot of different strands [of foreign-policy thinking]," she says. "If you start with that, it explains why it's not enough to spend $3 billion on refugee camps in Darfur, because the way those people are living is not the way they want to live. It's not a human way to live. It's graceless -- an affront to your sense of dignity."

During Bush's second term, a strange disconnect has arisen in liberal foreign-policy circles in response to the president's so-called "freedom agenda." Some liberals, like Matthew Yglesias in his book Heads In The Sand, note the insincerity of the administration's stated goal of exporting democracy. Bush, they observe, only targets for democratization countries that challenge American hegemony. Other liberal foreign-policy types, such as Thomas Carothers and Marina Ottaway of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, insist the administration is sincere but too focused on elections without supporting the civil-society institutions that sustain democracy. Still others, like Kenneth Roth of Human Rights Watch, contend that a focus on democracy in the developing world without privileging the protection of civil and political rights is a recipe for a dangerous illiberalism.

What's typically neglected in these arguments is the simple insight that democracy does not fill stomachs, alleviate malaria, or protect neighborhoods from marauding bands of militiamen. Democracy, in other words, is valuable to people insofar as it allows them first to meet their basic needs. It is much harder to provide that sense of dignity than to hold an election in Baghdad or Gaza and declare oneself shocked when illiberal forces triumph. "Look at why the baddies win these elections," Power says. "It's because [populations are] living in climates of fear." U.S. policy, she continues, should be "about meeting people where they're at. Their fears of going hungry, or of the thug on the street. That's the swamp that needs draining. If we're to compete with extremism, we have to be able to provide these things that we're not [providing]."

This is why, Obama's advisers argue, national security depends in large part on dignity promotion. Without it, the U.S. will never be able to destroy al-Qaeda. Extremists will forever be able to demagogue conditions of misery, making continued U.S. involvement in asymmetric warfare an increasingly counterproductive exercise -- because killing one terrorist creates five more in his place. "It's about attacking pools of potential terrorism around the globe," Gration says. "Look at Africa, with 900 million people, half of whom are under 18. I'm concerned that unless you start creating jobs and livelihoods we will have real big problems on our hands in ten to fifteen years."

Obama sees this as more than a global charity program; it is the anvil against which he can bring down the hammer on al-Qaeda. "He took many of the [counterinsurgency] principles -- the paradoxes, like how sometimes you're less secure the more force is used -- and looked at it from a more strategic perspective," Sewall says. "His policies deal with root causes but do not misconstrue root causes as a simple fix. He recognizes that you need to pursue a parallel anti-terrorism [course] in its traditional form along with this transformed approach to foreign policy." Not for nothing has Obama received private advice or public support from experts like former Clinton and Bush counterterrorism advisers Richard Clarke and Rand Beers, and John Brennan, the first chief of the National Counterterrorism Center.

The Obama foreign-affairs brain trust balks at the suggestion that what it's proposing is radical. "He said we'd take out al-Qaeda's senior leadership in the Pakistani tribal areas if Pakistan will not. That's not, to me, a revolutionary policy," Rhodes says. "Watching him get attacked on the right is absurd. You've got guys who argued for a massive invasion and occupation of a country that had nothing to do with 9-11 criticizing him for advocating the use of highly targeted force to kill Osama bin Laden!"

Rhodes is referring, of course, to John McCain, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, who recently asked of Obama, "Will we risk the confused leadership of an inexperienced candidate who once suggested invading our ally, Pakistan?" It's no secret that McCain, a war hero who is to the right of Bush when it comes to Iraq, hopes to make this a foreign-policy election. Conventional wisdom holds this would give him an advantage over Obama. A Feb. 28 Pew Research Center poll found 43 percent of respondents believe Obama is "not tough enough" on foreign policy. Thirty-nine percent believe Obama's foreign policy is "just right," while 47 percent say the same of McCain.

Even so, Obama's foreign-policy advisers are thrilled at the prospect of facing McCain. Had the GOP nomination gone to Mitt Romney or Mike Huckabee, politicians who don't particularly care about foreign policy, an Obama victory would not provide a mandate for the sweeping foreign-affairs overhaul his campaign proposes. November's election could be, for the first time in a very long time, a choice between two radically different visions of U.S. global engagement. "We want to have this debate with John McCain," a close Obama adviser says. "[Obama] will offer this clear contrast."

Susan Rice, an assistant secretary of state in the Clinton administration and one of the few foreign-policy-establishment luminaries to sign on with Obama, explains what's at stake: "After eight years of George Bush, when the next president puts his or her hand on the Bible to be sworn in, the U.S. is going to get one brief second look [from the world] about whether the U.S. truly learned to change from its past mistakes, recent and historic, and whether we're again the kind of America people look to lead in a constructive fashion, or whether we're hopeless. In my opinion, they'll look at McCain and decide we're trapped in our old mistakes."

Of course, it remains to be seen how voters might look at an Obama-McCain race. "The important distinction will be, does Obama come across as saying he wants to make a break with the foreign policy of the last seven years, or does it sound like he'll take foreign policy in a fundamentally different direction than that of the last twenty, thirty, fifty years?" says Guy Molyneux, a Democratic pollster with Peter D. Hart Associates. Americans are eager to put the Bush doctrine behind them, Molyneux says, but there's a danger that voters will see Obama as a "young guy who's less experienced but sounds like he's taking off in a new direction."


***


In his focus on the importance of dignity in our policy toward the developing world, Obama sounds quite a bit like John F. Kennedy, who knitted together an argument for engagement with the "non-aligned" world and began the tradition of development assistance as a foreign-policy goal. However, Kennedy's basic foreign policy continued along the Cold War lines that had been laid down during the Truman administration.

Democratic presidential candidates since Kennedy have either downplayed foreign policy or simply argued for more competence in its execution, with two major exceptions: George McGovern in 1972 and Jimmy Carter in 1976. In the popular imagination, based on the "Come home, America" line from his nomination acceptance speech, McGovern pivoted from a striking critique of the immorality of the Vietnam War to an indictment of U.S. involvement abroad. But McGovern purposefully left this broad criticism out of most of his campaign. "I concentrated on Vietnam," McGovern says in a phone interview, "because I thought it would be difficult to sell a comprehensive rewriting of American foreign policy." Carter is a more ambiguous case. In the wake of Watergate, he made a full-spectrum argument against the Washington establishment. Rethinking foreign policy was a part of that, and his aide Hamilton Jordan remarked, "If, after the inauguration, you find Cy Vance as secretary of state and Zbigniew Brzezinski as head of national security, then I would say we failed." Both men, of course, received precisely those posts.

Obama is doing something braver with foreign policy than McGovern or Carter. Much, of course, could go wrong. Right-wing demagogues are already implying Obama is a Muslim terrorist. Conservatives are using Obama's argument about the inextricability of international prosperity and U.S. national security to portray him as a "post-American globalist." Jewish right-wingers in the U.S. have begun a smear campaign not just about Obama, but also about Power, as writers for Commentary and National Review have baselessly implied that she is an anti-Semite. Expect more of this for the duration of the primary season, and, if Obama wins, beyond.

If he wins in the general election, he will face a crush of foreign-policy problems so enormous that they risk overwhelming even the most competent, experienced national-security team. Iraq is, of course, a nightmare, and al-Qaeda is not just sitting still in its Pakistani safe haven. To propose rebooting U.S. foreign policy now is, to say the least, ambitious. Many military leaders consider Obama an unknown quantity. At a recent talk, Washington Post correspondent Thomas Ricks said that officers and soldiers serving in Iraq thought that McCain and Clinton would both pursue a foreign-policy commensurate with Bush's, but Obama left them puzzled. Once in office, Obama might feel compelled to turn his back on the critique he makes on the trail.

But while the doubts about Obama contain fair points, they also, to a certain degree, reflect a triumph of the Iraq War mind-set. Why not demand the destruction of al-Qaeda? Why not pursue the enlightened global leadership promised by liberal internationalism? Why not abandon fear? What is it we have to fear, exactly?

"He goes back to Roosevelt," Power says. "Freedom from fear and freedom from want. What if we actually offered that? What if we delivered that in the developing world? That would be a transformative agenda for us." The end of the Iraq War mind-set, it turns out, may be the beginning of America's reacquaintance with its best traditions.

Reprinted with permission from Spencer Ackerman, "The Obama Doctrine," The American Prospect, Volume 19, Number 4: March 24, 2008. The American Prospect, 2000 L Street, Suite 717, Washington, DC 20036. All rights reserved.

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See more stories tagged with: war, iraq, foreign policy, barack obama

Spencer Ackerman is an associate editor at The New Republic.

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Obama will not win
Posted by: democracynowiniraq on Mar 28, 2008 12:10 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No candidate in the modern primary era has ever been elected in November after failing to win more than one of the nation's seven largest states in either its pre-convention primary or, if the state didn't hold a primary, its caucuses. That will be the case if Obama loses Pennsylvania in April. (Admittedly, no one who lost six out of seven has ever been nominated either, so perhaps Obama can make history twice.)

No Democrat who hails from north of the Mason-Dixon Line has been elected president since John Kennedy in 1960.

No candidate in the modern era has ever been elected president with a voting record that could be identified as his party's most liberal or conservative, yet the National Journal found Obama to be the most liberal senator this past year after computing his Senate voting record. (The previous closest attempts by candidates on the comparable extreme were made by the Right's Barry Goldwater in 1964 and the Left's George McGovern in 1972, and we know what happened to them.)

Except for arguably Abraham Lincoln no candidate has ever been elected to the presidency with as little significant state or national political experience as Obama's. (Jimmy Carter, in 1976, came the closest.)

There's one other worrisome, though not ironclad, precedent possibly standing in Obama's way. Though the polls are all over the lot at this point, according to the Real Clear Politics average, Obama currently trails John McCain by only a point or two. That's a margin that easily could be eliminated, and, unto itself, would seem to be no great cause for concern. But history suggests otherwise.

At this point in the election cycle -- before any fear of the unknown has set in -- challengers are often running much better against their incumbent-party opponents. In 1988, Michael Dukakis had about a 10-point lead over George Bush (the senior and then-vice-president), only to lose by around eight -- an 18-point swing.

In fact, that's been the usual pattern. In 1976, Carter led Gerald Ford by 10 points in the spring, and even McGovern in the spring of 1972 found himself running roughly even with Richard Nixon (albeit with a potential George Wallace third-party candidacy in the mix). By November, the incumbent had surged considerably in both cases.

The only modern exceptions to this involved Bill Clinton, in 1992, and Ronald Reagan, in 1980. But both faced notably different circumstances than Obama does.

First, Clinton and Reagan got to run against unpopular incumbents. McCain is not George Bush -- no matter how much Obama may try to tie the two together.

Second, in both 1992 and 1980, there were significant third-party candidacies (H. Ross Perot and John Anderson, respectively). Like most Independent candidacies, their ire was aimed primarily at the status quo (and thus the incumbent), changing the dynamic of the race. These third-party candidacies also made it easier for the insurgent to win without having to concentrate on getting 50 percent of the vote in every state. That pattern seems unlikely to be replicated this year.

Democrats have been reassuring themselves that, so far, their poor showing in the national match-ups against McCain is because their party is currently divided in a bitter primary struggle that will be resolved by the time the fall campaign begins. And, by then, the electorate will know Obama better.

But all these precedents add up to suggest that if Obama becomes our 44th president, the 2008 campaign will define a new American electoral era, with a new set of patterns. Obama's supporters have been promising that their movement will revolutionize our politics. If they're going to win, they'd better be right.

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» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: dronkenpiraat
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: democracynowiniraq
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: dronkenpiraat
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: artie
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: realist
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: VByers
» McCain IS Bush Posted by: Iconoclast421
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: edmenken
» Keys to the White House Posted by: brunowe
» RE: Keys to the White House Posted by: willymack
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: carbon-based
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: democracynowiniraq
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: carbon-based
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: esoder
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: lamac66
» RE: La la la la I can't hear you... Posted by: Prairie Waif
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: Ratskii
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: newtype_alpha
» RE: Obama will not win Posted by: aislinns_lilypad
Numbers say Barack or Hillary can win the democratic portion of the Democratic party's primary.
Posted by: aouie01 on Mar 28, 2008 1:01 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Superdelegates "should not" overturn the results of the primary with their choices unless there is some overwhelming reason to do so. Such overturning should be based on wrongs that rise close to the level of impeachable offenses and not on political quibbling.

Sorry about all the "abouts", but exact numbers are difficult to find in the Democratic party's primaries. If we take about 4047 total delegates - about 800 superdelegates, that leaves about 3247 delegates. If we subtract the delegates won by other nominees 3247 - about 18 (Edwards) = 3229 delegates. To win by simple majority Barack Obama or Hillary would have to get more than about 3247 / 2 = about 1624 delegates. To simply get the most votes (presuming the remaining votes are split only between the two leading candidates) Barack or Hillary would have to get more than about 3229 / 2 = about 1615 delegates. This would mean about 1615 - about 1406 = about 209 more delegates are needed for Barack to win, and about 1615 - about 1249 = 366 more delegates are needed for Hillary to win. There is about 574 remaining delegates to be won democratically in the Democratic Party's primary. Barack would need about 209/574*100 = about 36.5% of the delegates in the remaining elections, and Hillary would need about 366/574*100 = about 63.5% of the delegates in the remaining elections. Either candidate could make it. Numbers and polls favor Barack currently.

Without careful analysis, I get the impression that Alternet is favoring Barack (and I don't blame them for that choice). Alternet should be careful to plan articles in a manner that won't be too regrettable if Hillary should happen to win the democratic portion of the Democratic party's primaries.
Sincerely,
Aouie

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» The 2024 (or 2025) fallacy Posted by: aouie01
» RE: The 2024 (or 2025) fallacy Posted by: Jack1849
When Obama commits to substantially reducing the military budget . . .
Posted by: Rune on Mar 28, 2008 1:46 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
. . . I won't laugh when he presents platitudes about shifting the mindset that gets us into a continuous string of wars, both cold and hot. But that is far from what he has proposed.

Spy and military spending is already eating up more than half of the federal budget, which is awash in red ink, and Obama wants to spend more than even Bush has proposed. Occasionally Obama tries to hide that fact by suggesting cuts to a given program, but in more hawkish company, he will let the defense contractors that have been almost as generous to him as to Hillary Clinton know that they gravy train won't end when George Bush finally packs it in.

That, folks, is the mindset that keeps the U.S. in a constant state of war and threats of war. "If you build it, they (wars) will come."

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» how much and prove it please Posted by: foreverhope
Foreign policy: is this a republic or an empire?
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 28, 2008 2:40 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real key issues regarding foreign policy are more broad and revolve around the U.S. military's current role as an oil industry bodyguard, and the overall rubric of "neoliberal economic globalization", aka neocolonialism in U.S. foreign policy. In that regard, Al Qaeda is just a sideshow - convenient, useful, but unimportant to larger objectives.

One central goal of U.S. foreign policy is to ensure U.S. access to and control of key natural resources, the most important being petroleum and natural gas. This is is the main role for the U.S. military in the world today. Any honest analysis will conclude that the central issue in Iraq is petroleum, and that the central issue in Central Asia is gas and petroleum, and that the central issue in Africa is petroleum, whether in Nigeria or in Sudan or in Chad.

Any global empire would need to control global energy supplies - and that was the Bush agenda (Chalmers Johnson:

"By the end of the 1990s, the neoconservatives were developing their grandiose theories to promote overt imperialism by the "lone superpower" -- including preventive and preemptive unilateral military action, spreading democracy abroad at the point of a gun, obstructing the rise of any "near-peer" country or bloc of countries that might challenge U.S. military supremacy, and a vision of a "democratic" Middle East that would supply us with all the oil we wanted. A component of their grand design was a redeployment and streamlining of the military. The initial rationale was for a program of transformation that would turn the armed forces into a lighter, more agile, more high-tech military, which, it was imagined, would free up funds that could be invested in imperial policing."

Michael Klare has written a number of articles on the key links between the U.S. military and U.S. energy policy - The Pentagon v. Peak Oil, Jun 2007, for example:

. . .At the heart of the national military strategy imposed by the Bush administration — the Bush Doctrine — are two core principles: transformation, or the conversion of America’s stodgy, tank-heavy Cold War military apparatus into an agile, continent-hopping high-tech, futuristic war machine; and pre-emption, or the initiation of hostilities against “rogue states” like Iraq and Iran, thought to be pursuing weapons of mass destruction. What both principles entail is a substantial increase in the Pentagon’s consumption of petroleum products — either because such plans rely, to an increased extent, on air and sea-power or because they imply an accelerated tempo of military operations."

The second major goal of U.S. foreign policy is to establish "bilateral trade agreements" that tie countries closely to the U.S., often through IMF/World Bank loan(sharking) agreements that are then used to revamp entire economies, destroy social safety nets and create de facto export colonies that service the U.S. economy (for example, by buying up U.S. GMO corn exports, or by providing a source of cheap labor for U.S. manufacturers). Sweatshop slave labor provides most of the disposable consumables in the U.S. - and the more "bilateral free trade agreements" the U.S. signs, the more blue collar jobs are outsourced. This key aspect of U.S. foreign policy is described in Naomi Klein's Shock Doctrine as well as in John Perkin's Confessions of an Economic Hitman. It's created a lot of poverty, and many billionaires.

The candidates ? McCain is a bloodthirsty Bush clone, Clinton has tried to be a left-wing hawk, and Obama has been trying to show he's tougher on Iran than Clinton is. He does say he'll cut the bloated >$500 billion military budget - a good sign (of political courage, at least).

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» Michael Klare Posted by: Iconoclast421
» No, it's just demand stimulation Posted by: thoughtcriminal
» to answer your question. Posted by: hurricane hugo
Well done
Posted by: saltoafronteira on Mar 28, 2008 3:30 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that's the old america talking, the one we appreciated, in spite of all its flaws.
Get them, Obama !

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The mindset that led to the war
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Mar 28, 2008 5:32 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That is something that Obama cannot address, because he is CFR. He needs to denounce that organization if he wishes to be anything but hypocritical in analyzing why we always end up in these unwinnable wars. The CFR owns the media, and therefore controls the boundaries of debate. If the public is seriously debating ending the war, then it is because the CFR is allowing that to happen. But notice that few are actually questioning the legality of the war -- the constitutionality of the war. Except for rarities such as Noam Chomsky or Ron Paul. And look how they are treated by the CFR controlled media.

This video says it all about Obama.

Do you know what would happen if Obama came out and totally rejected the CFR? If he said something like "the CFR is a global eugenics front, designed to placate, enslave, and ultimately exterminate 90% of the world's population." He would be correct, BUT he would be destroyed by the media.

It does no good to look into the mindset that led us to war if you dont accept the fact that the media is top-down controlled by elites that are laughing their asses off at the american public. By the time the general public finishes arguing why we went to war, the controllers will have already moved onto the next phase of mischief. We already know why they went to war. Because they want to destroy this country, by using it as an engine to build a police state control grid so that they can carry out hitlerian style eugenics on a global scale. With america gone, there will be no one to stop it.

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» Are you helpless, EncinoM? Posted by: joeunix
» so who would you make our Decider? Posted by: foreverhope
Zbigniew Brzezinski, Obama's Advisor?
Posted by: bbfmail on Mar 28, 2008 6:05 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Had read in previous months that Brzezinski was one of Obama's advisors, but did not find him mentioned as one in this article. Did I miss something? Has he resigned?

From an interview with Brzezinski(Mr. Regret What?):

Regret what? That secret operation was an excellent idea. It had the effect of drawing the Russians into the Afghan trap and you want me to regret it? The day that the Soviets officially crossed the border, I wrote to President Carter, in substance: We now have the opportunity of giving to the USSR its Vietnam war. Indeed, for almost 10 years, Moscow had to carry on a war unsupportable by the government, a conflict that brought about the demoralization and finally the breakup of the Soviet empire.

Question: And neither do you regret having supported the Islamic fundamentalists, having given arms and advice to future terrorists?

Brzezinski: What is most important to the history of the world? The Taliban or the collapse of the Soviet empire? Some stirred-up Moslems or the liberation of Central Europe and the end of the cold war?**

http://members.aol.com/bblum6/brz.htm

I saw a tape of this interview with Brzezinski. He laughed after making these comments. This is the man who literally advised Carter to turn Afghanistan over to the Taliban. How many US troops have died since this? How many billions has it cost the US citizens? With advisors like this on the Obama team, this country will be in serious trouble if he is the President.

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» Obama's advisors Posted by: foreverhope
» RE: Obama's advisors Posted by: january37
» Nice try with the photos Posted by: brunowe
» Give me a break Posted by: joeunix
» McCain & Clinton are far worse! Posted by: thoughtcriminal
» Obama and Gitmo Lawyers Posted by: foreverhope
What can I say
Posted by: solrev on Mar 28, 2008 6:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
“Give peace a chance”. The problem any candidate has is trying to verbalize a policy and at the same time create a media sound bite that the entertainment media will pickup. Where did Walter Cronkite go? The TV debates are worthless because the moderators are to busy trying to be super stars. In place of the 19 or 20 debates Obama and Clinton had in the current format they should change to an issue debate format. Tune in for a one-hour debate on healthcare. All the moderator ever has to say, is “you are off topic and I am not here to listen to your speeches”. If the candidates look like fools they probably are.

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Open letter from a "typical White," person
Posted by: Hearthis2 on Mar 28, 2008 7:55 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Attack Pakistan? IS Obama suicidal? So we have a Dem candidate (Obama), who has spent the last twenty years in a militant church with a militant reverend who hates anyone who isn't White, who gave his OWN money to support the church and you think this guy is going to be fair to ANYONE when he gets into office.
What the heck is wrong with people...are you taking the right pill? Because I think you all are living in a Matrix or some kind. The Reverend Wright has been preaching which direction Obama will go for the last twenty years...listen folks...you don't hang out in a church for over twenty years (Yeah, I said that again becuase your not understanding), and NOT believe in the messages that are being sermoned up every Sunday. IF you want to know WHO Obama REALLY is...listen to HIS Pastor for God's sake.
It would be like someone joining the KKK for twenty years and then when found out saying, "Oh, I don't beleive that stuff." PHOOEY.
Think outside of the box. Don't follow the idiots who write about him...LISTEN FOR YOURSELVES.
THE GUY HAS A MISSION. A MISSION set up by his years of being pumped full of what is right by a man who is MOST definately got an agenda both here in the states AND in the Middle East.

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The Pentagon and the Military Industrial Complex
Posted by: Southern Gal on Mar 28, 2008 8:24 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama will have to control the Pentagon and the Military Industrial Complex to change foreign policies. Eisenhower warned us about these groups and their control of our foreign policies and our lives. They have not been challenged by administrations or Congress, because of their enormous power and control. I believe that our government lives in fear of these groups and the price that they will extract from those who oppose them.

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» Say what? Posted by: joeunix
great article - Obama can bring us into next era
Posted by: dgleason on Mar 28, 2008 10:33 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have just been through the 1st page and a little of the comment and I find it amazing that this article is about how Obama is different and has a hope for working with the thought process of the american people so that we can distinguish leadership from rhetoric.

It is time we are willing to get deeper in the issues. He is right in that the problem is not really that the bushies took us where they took us but rather why they were able to in such a short time.

The bushies are rogue, even for republicans, Obama is the answer to that rogueness imo.

The reason why Hillary is not the answer is because she is flawed in the same historical way. Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results is the definition of insanity. (paraphrase of someone else).

Hillary is just more of the same. The reason why Hillary's vote on Iraq is such a deep problem is because with what she knew of the bushes based on her 'experience' the chance that they were going to go rogue was very high and she had to have known it, with her experience.

That tells us something about her. She may be as good as we have gotten recently as a candidate, she is not good enough for these times. She is not good enough for the structural changes that are required so that some idiot in the future doesn't use the precidents of this administration to turn us into a dictatorship.

And if we, left right center and independents are not willing to embrace what needs to be embraced to make that impossible, maybe we need to learn the lesson.

I hope not!

Danielle

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The US President
Posted by: willymack on Mar 28, 2008 10:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is many things. First and foremost, our President is the person we, the people put forward as our advocate, our head diplomat, and the representative of the best our nation has to offer. Let's look at some of these people. First, our current "president". He was swept into office even though he lost the popular vote, and under suspicious circumstances, to say the least. Most of the world is far more astute and politically savvy than Americans are, and the 2000 "election" theft is obvious to them, even if it isn't to half of our people. Whenever our current chief executive opens his mouth, it's obvious he's reading or reciting a prepared script, and anything, such as an unexpected question, throws him into a dither and reveals his incoherent mind. Sen Mccain recently revealed this distressing characteristic on several occasions, and had to be corrected by his Siamese twin, Joe Lieberman at least once. Then, there are Clinton and Obama, who are far better educated, more knowledgeable, and mentally adroit than either bush or mccain. Who do YOU want representing us before the world, a dithering, blithering chucklehead, or an urbane sophisticate, who is at once knowledgeable, coherent, and eloquent?

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I support Obama but want Hillary to win the nomination!
Posted by: HughScott on Mar 28, 2008 10:32 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's why. If Obama wins the nomination, the Clinton political machine will torpedo his general election campaign so Hillary can run against President McCain in 2012.

Conversely, if Hillary wins (steals) the nomination, McCain will clobber her in November.

Hillary's loss will finish her politically and allow Obama to build his populist base and get four more years of Senate seasoning.

The only flaw in my scenario is, can America survive four years of Bush/McCain policies?

Hugh E. Scott, Vietnam vet, lifelong registered Republican, Ronald Reagan fan and ARDENT Obama supporter.

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» McCain in 2012? Posted by: LeaderofMen
This article intends to deceive progressives
Posted by: Earthian on Mar 28, 2008 10:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A foreign policy based on the vague notion of "dignity" is camouflage for a sweetness-covered policy of lawless militarism. The author states it should not be "controversial" to bomb Pakistani territory. Yes, if you don't believe in the Constitution which states that "all treaties made" are the "supreme law of the land." Yes if you don't believe in the validity of the UN Charter which forbids the threat or use of force against other nation states. Yes, if you intend to risk nuclear war through the supreme international crime of illegal aggression.

Obama's new mindset is to camouflage the policy that Bush has used for his term and which most US presidents have used since Monroe supported Gen. Jackson's invasion of Florida in 1818.

A new progressive mindset for foreign policy would be enforceable international law not vague, unenforceable "dignity."

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mama7
Posted by: mama7 on Mar 28, 2008 11:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To all of you who are afraid Obama doesn't have enough experience....let us remember the "experience" of the past administration: Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Libby,etc. If you were happy with that experience, then continue down the same path. I am willing to give Barack a chance. He has shown wisdom in listening to a set of different voices, he has shown courage in speaking on controversial issues, he has shown toughness in the face of criticism. Certainly he will not be able to change everything quickly and he will not be able to pass legislation unless we give him a congress with the ability to listen and make hard decisions. I for one, am simply sick of the same old stuff in Washington DC and will welcome someone with different ideas and the ability to bring people together.

As for his pastor........I am not electing his pastor, nor McCain's, nor Hillary's.....all of whom have "experience" with questionable pastors. We are not electing a pastor, nor are we clean ourselves on all of those with whom we associate. Isn't that part of the Christian message....to love the other, even when we don't agree?

Give Obama the opportunity to make this country honorable again.

From a 70 year old woman who ought to be a Hillary fan, but "ain't"

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» RE: mama7 Posted by: opmoc
Dangerous To Pre-Judge Anyone By Their Associations Before They Are Elected
Posted by: opmoc on Mar 28, 2008 11:12 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone who hopes to get elected has got to go along at least to some extent with the popular opinion of the electorate.

Whilst Obama is speaking a lot of nonsense about Al Qaeda being a real threat - that's what most Americans believe.

So he's a member of CFR - but is he a puppet?

There are very few politicians who actually voted against the Iraq War.

There are very few politicians who actually address some of the real issues - particularly the method of control by FEAR.

And what choice have Americans got?

Pit Bull Terrier - McCain - he looks even crazier than Cheney

Clinton - well just more of the same

Obama might actually attempt to make some real changes

Of course - if he actually makes it - and tries to do so - then he might not last very long

But - I think he might actually have the courage to try

What other choice is there?

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» AND Posted by: opmoc
» Oh, I Don't Know Posted by: pdxstudent
UH, What foreign policy?
Posted by: michaelo on Mar 28, 2008 12:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As I read this piece on Obama's
"revolutionary" approach to foreign policy, I kept looking for...uh, an enunciation of that foreign policy.

Either Ackerman never was told and thus, didn't share it with us or as I suspect, it was never told to him because a literal Obama foreign policy does not exist and if it does, it is being kept a secret until after he is elected.

What the article does is look at what Obama is not - what the wonkers on his various teams say the "concept" is, but never enumerate the specifics.

It is clear however, in my opinion, that ANY US foreign policy that is not critical of Israel, both in principle and in approach, will be little different than any other.

That is regarding the Palestinian's right to self determination and reparation, and to a rejection of alignment with the despots in the Middle East.

Were are once again being sold a campaign of Hope. Hope that Obama, once in office, will pull off what liberals and "progressives" pray will be some how different than say, McCain - Clinton or Bush.

I have news for you: Hope is in Arkansas and the last two scavengers of the American dream that popped out of Hope, Huckabee and Sr. Clinton only proved that you can't trust anyone if the origin of their lives and campaign is tied to Hope.

Michael O'McCarthy

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The Game Is Over When Gung-Ho American Kids Don't Want To Kill Anymore
Posted by: opmoc on Mar 28, 2008 1:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is only so much death and destruction anyone can take

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The American Child
Posted by: opmoc on Mar 28, 2008 1:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is born to Immigrants

In this case ( I am talking personally ) this year 2008

The immigrants are my Brother's Daughter from England

And the Father of The Child Born in East Germany

The Parents of The Child Met

In AMERICA

And when the Hurricane Katrina Hit

My Niece Was Looking After The Displaced People From New Orleans

With Her German Boyfriend

As Was Everyone On The Campus Of The University

The Fact That They are Professors Is Completely Irrelevant

They Both Did Far More To Support The Victims of Hurricane Katrina Than Did The American Government

The American Child is Completely Beautiful

And He Will Grow Up In a Better America and a Better World

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Atrocity-Linked U.S. Officials Advising Democratic, GOP Presidential Frontrunners
Posted by: chlamor on Mar 28, 2008 4:37 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ALLAN NAIRN: Right. And later, during Bill Clinton’s administration, during the Bosnia killing, the US actually flew some of the Afghan Mujahideen, the early al-Qaeda people—the US actually arranged for them to be flown from there to Bosnia to fight on the Muslim/NATO side.

Another key Obama adviser, Anthony Lake, he was the main force behind the US invasion of Haiti in the mid-Clinton years during which they brought back Aristide essentially in political chains, pledged to support a World Bank/IMF overhaul of the economy, which resulted in an increase in malnutrition deaths among Haitians and set the stage for the current ongoing political disaster in Haiti.

Another Obama adviser, General Merrill McPeak, an Air Force man, who not long after the Dili massacre in East Timor in ’91 that you and I survived, he was—I happened to see on Indonesian TV shortly after that—there was General McPeak overseeing the delivery to Indonesia of US fighter planes.

Another key Obama adviser, Dennis Ross. Ross, for many years under both Clinton and Bush 2, a key—he has advised Clinton and both Bushes. He oversaw US policy toward Israel/Palestine. He pushed the principle that the legal rights of the Palestinians, the rights recognized under international law, must be subordinated to the needs of the Israeli government—in other words, their desires, their desires to expand to do whatever they want in the Occupied Territories. And Ross was one of the people who, interestingly, led the political assault on former Democratic President Jimmy Carter. Carter, no peacenik—I mean, Carter is the one who bears ultimate responsibility for that Timor terror that Holbrooke was involved in. But Ross led an assault on him, because, regarding Palestine, Carter was so bold as to agree with Bishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa that what Israel was doing in the Occupied Territories was tantamount to apartheid. And so, Ross was one of those who fiercely attacked him.

Another Obama adviser, Sarah Sewall, who heads a human rights center at Harvard and is a former Defense official, she wrote the introduction to General Petraeus’s Marine Corps/Army counterinsurgency handbook, the handbook that is now being used worldwide by US troops in various killing operations. That’s the Obama team.

Link

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Where's the article?
Posted by: chlamor on Mar 28, 2008 4:59 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The title of this article is "Obama's Sweeping Foreign Policy Critique" and I'm telling you I read all the words that followed the title but did not find that article.

The reason is simple. Obama does not now nor has he ever in anyone's wildest dreams offered up anything even remotely close to a sweeping critique of US foreign policy.

Obama's rhetoric and his record is quite compatible with US hegemony and only differs in technique and appearance than the cruder US imperialists.

He wants more troops, more funding of the military machine and will continue US aggressions. He has stated as such so take him on his word.

Here we get more of the warmed over al-Qaeda bogeyman BS and we'll get the liberal humanitarian intervention schtick used by the Cruise Missile Left as the rationale for US forays into the world's energy hotspots.

The bit about dignity that is being loosely tossed about here is not what the rest of the world knows this to be, meaning autonomy and sovereignty, but is a not-so-clever device that will attempt to hide what is known as "development" which we know to be economic imperialism.

Obama is the consummate American Exceptionalist, read any of his foreign policy speeches, and has passed the test with the PTB proving his bona fides time and again when it comes down to promoting and doing errands for the Empire.

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I Found Nemesis - The Last Days of The American Republic By Chalmers Johnson - Too Hard To Read
Posted by: opmoc on Mar 28, 2008 5:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All The Facts Are In There

But I Couldn't Stop Crying

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We Need To Stop Complaining And Construct A Way Forward Out Of This Mess
Posted by: opmoc on Mar 28, 2008 5:30 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A Start Would Be To Bring All Our Soldiers Home And Start Thinking About It

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All Our Soldiers Want To Come Home
Posted by: opmoc on Mar 28, 2008 5:40 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I Have Met Some Of The Best

And I am Not Talking About Americans

The Elite of The British Army

Are Somewhat Special

Give Them a REAL Enemy

They Just Do Their Job as Do All Professionals

But they do it rather better

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Correct but Impenetrable to the Masses
Posted by: AlexLawyer on Mar 28, 2008 6:41 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This analysis is correct, nuanced and logical; it reflects what many of us have long been saying. However, in a nation whose ideas have been shaped by John Wayne and Rambo, whose news comes in 30 second sound bites, whose Weltanschauung has been shaped by the us-vs-them, black-vs-white simplicities of demagogues within government and the media, it won't be widely accepted. McCain's and Bush's militaristic jingoism has an atavistic appeal lacking in an ethical, analytical approach. Hillary Clinton is trying to appeal to the neanderthals by posing as a war heroine and the progressives by posing as a peacemaker, neither of which she is or has ever been.

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Can I Just Have One Last Word
Posted by: opmoc on Mar 28, 2008 7:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am a working class bloke from a Northern English town - Oldham - a few miles north of Manchester

And Americans have always fascinated me

I have met some completely Amazing Really Gifted Americans Who Had So Much Passion and Quality and Sheer Hard Work Who Inspired Us English To Achieve Some Great Things

Yet....

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Focus on the heart of leadership
Posted by: foreverhope on Mar 28, 2008 8:20 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
from the Strange Death of Liberal America

The text of the Ohio debate is the real key to understanding why Clinton’s campaign has imploded.

Tim Russert’s question about what would happen if after withdrawing our troops from Iraq we found ourselves facing a situation in which al Qaeda exploited the vacuum by taking control of part of the country to use as a base to mount another 9/11 attack? This question is one that John McCain has raised and is sure to be raised in the coming campaign. Just to make the scenario more interesting, Russert posited that what passed for the Iraqi government had told us they did not want us to intervene.

The heart of the question, lay in its masterful focus on the heart of leadership, for it is in a crisis that we find out a leader’s true values. People need to see values translated into actions, especially during a crisis in which all a leader has to fall back upon is who they are and what they stand for. Curiously, in some ways these critical decisions evidence even more the qualities of authenticity and values that lie at the heart of transformational leadership, for these qualities may be all a leader has for guidance in those moments. As CNN’s Campbell Brown stated during the Texas Democratic Presidential Debate, “A leader’s judgment is most tested in a time of crisis.”

Clinton’s answer said everything about why she is losing this election and why she will not make a good President. First, she tries to dodge the question by saying she won’t deal with hypothetical situations. That may be a reasonable response to some off-the-wall impossibility, but the scenario Russert proposed has been on the table for some time as a real possibility following an American withdrawal.

Clinton’s attempt to shrug off Russert’s probing represented a moral and intellectual failure. It was plain from her attempt to avoid answering the question that neither she nor her staff had thought about this possibility or rehearsed an answer. We all know that is exactly why Iraq has turned into a mess: because George W. Bush and Dick Cheney never considered alternative scenarios when they brazenly invaded the country. In their hearts they knew they were right, so they never believed the country would fall into the sectarian chaos it has become.

The moral failure in Clinton’s dodging the question also was one of cowardice. She lacked a prepared answer, so she refused to give one. Unfortunately leaders and Presidents do not have that luxury. Whether it is an organization or the White House, you want someone in charge who WILL think about alternatives and who is not afraid to answer difficult questions.

Russert’s pit-bull personality can sometimes be grating, but in this case it proved an asset, because he would not let Clinton dodge the question. It was the rambling answer she finally gave that truly revealed her moral failure. You could almost see her triangulating as she spoke like a fifth-grader wondering about a trick question. Her triangulating told her the trick was an attempt to bring up the issue that has dogged her throughout this campaign–her vote in favor of the Iraq War. That even after Tim Russert’s probing we don’t have an answer is troubling.

In sharp contrast to Clinton, Barack Obama had no trouble dealing with hypothetical scenarios. If his answer showed that he also had not totally thought this issue through, it did show that in a crisis he could call on core values without waiting for the pollsters.

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I pray that Obama will win, but how do you fight against:
Posted by: Missing Piece on Mar 28, 2008 8:25 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A False Flag
Resource War
Peak Oil
A very probable economic depression

You can't tackle these issues unless the people know the truth, and the people either can't handle the truth, don't want to believe, or are, Ignorant Conservative baby boomers who believe anything that Fox News tells them to believe.

Good Luck fellow americans, we had a good run but its going to get worse and it may never get better. What do you think brought on the dark ages? Peak Resources!

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do i have this right?
Posted by: e rice on Mar 28, 2008 8:33 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
one obama advisor helped shape the tactics of the wars in iraq and afganistan--which we are, if not losing, certainly not winning in any noticable fashion. afgani warlords, poppy fields, cia involvement, arming sectarians...

obama advocates 'dignity promotion'--which includes bombing, if the occasion arises, the territory of an ally even if the ally does not grant permission. dignity. right. god forbid bin laden is found in paris.

an advisor leaves his employ because of 'an intemperate remark to a reporter.' what does that mean? she had no diplomacy? she let slip private information? this is a high level advisor?

he plans to talk to iran--this would be nice, since, according to some sources, iran has handed over suspected terrorists to this government. will his first words by 'thank you'?

one advisor says that bad guys are elected by frightened voters--no suggestion that maybe the voters might want the bad guys, even if this government doesn't. and, even granting that the population would vote for someone other than the bad guy, how does obama plan to let the voters have their way? a voter protection program? or does he plan to do something really radical, like allow sovreign countries their own choices of leaders?

is there anything concrete in this article? oh, yes, that's right--he's saving the details for later.

i think i'll put off a decision till later.

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Obama Can Win: McCain Will Go Down Because of His "100 Years in Iraq" Approach
Posted by: sofla100 on Mar 28, 2008 8:55 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Iraq war shows signs of instability and deterioration that is likely to continue well into the elections. McCain has the dubious distinction of being the wars biggest supporter (after Bush). A smart Obama knows full well that 70% plus of Americans consider Iraq a major mistake. This will be a big, deciding factor in the elections and could very easily take Obama into the White House.

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Depressing
Posted by: animalleaderisgreat on Mar 28, 2008 9:21 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pretty depressing to think that people believe Obama's foreign policy position has any kind of sweep other than that down the center and to the right. I love the passage from what is now known as The Speech in which he says the conflicts in the Middle East are due to "the perverse and hateful ideologies of radical Islam" ... as if the US and Israel have nothing to do with it. As if there isn't a radical Christianity, or a radical Judaism (thanks to John Walsh for pointing this out on Counterpunch). Obama will win; he's right-wing enough for the American Prospect, from which this article is reprinted, and right-wing enough for those who decide these things (in my optimism I believe Obama is far too right-wing for the average citizen, who really can see through all this gargabe).

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Limitation
Posted by: emmas on Mar 29, 2008 8:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem with the claim that 'Obama has a new vision for the world' is that he doesn't. His vision seems to be based on the premise that America needs to be restored to its former moral greatness, so it can show the world what democracy really is. Presumably, the rest of the world's population will then fall into line and accept that America is the rightful owner of the world. It's still the same mentality. He's not challenging the chest beating 'we're going to wipe out al Qaida, no matter how much destruction it might cause' line. It's this basic mentality that needs to change, rather than slightly modifying it to 'we need to dominate the world in a nicer way'.

It's depressing that this world view is considered 'revolutionary', because it's really not; it's more of the same. It's also interesting that candidates who actually challenged this basic conception of the world (Kucinich, for example) were dismissed as crazed pacifist leftists.

Obviously, Obama's preferable to McCain and probably Clinton, but his view of the world isn't that different from theirs.

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Obama takes oil money too
Posted by: democracynowiniraq on Mar 30, 2008 12:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://12counts.wordpress.com/ 2008/03/29/obama-caught- lying-he-does-take-money-from-oil-companies-and-lobbyists/

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alpaig
Posted by: alpaig on Mar 30, 2008 1:25 PM   
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Are we talking about the Obama who just this weekend in PA said he would be taking us back to the foreign policy traditions of Ronald
Reagan and George Bush Sr. ? Reagan is one of his role models in regards to foreign policy?
This is about the third time he's made reference to Reagan since his campaign began.
I don't think the people on the far left really know who this guy is. I don't think he even knows who he is. Or should I assume it's just like his NAFTA fiasco with Canada, where he's just saying to those blue collar voters in PA that he wants to go back to Reagan foreign policy to get their votes. The far left faction of this party must be feeling pretty proud knowing their guy has a role model in Reagan.

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Like who can care what this Anti-American Supporter has
Posted by: niliadis on Mar 30, 2008 3:00 PM   
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to say! His support for WRight of Twenty years is enough for me not to care and pray to god that this man does not become our next President! Great Article! Part #1
Breaking from Newsmax.com
Unconvinced by Obama’s Wright Speech
Barack Obama’s speech last week addressing his 20-year relationship with his radical pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, was very well done, yet unconvincing.
Obama sought to explain that relationship and why he could not end this close association, despite the minister's hate-filled rhetoric. He said, “There will no doubt be those for whom my statements of condemnation are not enough. Why associate myself with Rev. Wright in the first place, they may ask? Why not join another church?”
Yes, those are the questions that people are asking.
Many of Rev. Wright’s incendiary statements are on videos sold by his church. Minister Louis Farrakhan, a friend of Rev. Wright with whom he traveled to visit Muammar Qadaffi in Libya, also makes his sermons and those of others associated with the Nation of Islam available for sale. Their attacks on the U.S. and Israel often coincide with those of Rev. Wright
Rev. Wright’s sermons charge that the U.S. government gives African-Americans drugs, created AIDS, and is deliberately infecting blacks with that disease. His sermons claim that the U.S. unjustifiably nuclear bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War II, and that 9/11 and the deaths of 3,000 Americans were caused by U.S. foreign policy.
He alleges Israeli state terrorism against the Palestinians; calling Israel a “dirty word” and “racist country.” He blames Israel for 9/11 and supports the divestment campaign against it, denouncing “Zionism.” His venomous thoughts are summed up in his most discussed sermon in which he says the U.S. government “wants us to sing God Bless America. No, no, not God Bless America. God damn America. God damn America for killing innocent people.”
Sen. Obama in his speech acknowledged that the rantings of his minister are “inexcusable,” but stated, “I can no more disown him than I can disown the black community. I can no more disown him than I can my white grandmother — a woman who helped raise me, a woman who sacrificed again and again for me, a woman who loves me as much as she loves anything in this world, but a woman who once confessed her fear of black men who passed by her on the street, and who on more than one occasion has uttered racial or ethnic stereotypes that made me cringe.”
Cintinued next....
© 2008 Newsmax. All rights reserved.
Editor's Notes:

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OBAMA CAN'T DO IT ALONE
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Apr 4, 2008 8:26 AM   
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He's right on many things. But the thinking is foreign to me. The thought of actually liking our president seems strange. Next to Bush he's a flower child. So he's right about the mindset. His plan can work but he can't do it alone. War is very profitable to some. How much he can upset this American way of life remains to be seen. For one thing it isn't working.I believe his ideas are worth a try. Thanks, ANNA

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