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January 11, 2008
Clinton-Obama
on Iraq: The silence is deafening
by Mark Alexander
From The Patriot Post
Pondering the '08
presidential candidates this week, with the
primaries finally underway, I find that recent
changes in the Democrat strategy are most
telling.
Whatever happened to the Left's relentless
protests about Operation
Iraqi Freedom -- you know, the quagmire in
Mesopotamia? Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, who
never let a media minute pass a few months back
without condemning OIF, have been all but silent on
the conflict.
Why, it's almost as if their traitorous
use of OIF sound bites for campaign cannon
fodder has decreased as the success rate of our
military campaign in the region has increased.
Could it be?
Indeed, the inverse relationship between the
frequency of the Left's objections to OIF, and our
successes in the region, is painfully clear. As our
combat forces have proven the value of General
David Petraeus's counterinsurgency strategy, "the
surge," they have also reduced the Democrats'
political objections to campaign-trail rubble.
Of course, when pressed for answers on OIF, as
they were at last week's debates in New Hampshire,
Clinton and Obama provide answers that will keep
linguists and contortionists busy for years.
Clinton, who infamously complained to General
Petraeus that only a "willing suspension of
disbelief" would lead one to conclude the surge was
working, says now that her assessment is still
right and that that there is no justification that
our troops "should remain beyond, you know,
today."
Obama, for his part, repeated the tired Demo
mantra that "we have not made ourselves safer as a
consequence" of OIF -- which explains all the
terrorist attacks on our soil since 9/11. He then
insisted that the real reason for any success in
Iraq is that "the Democrats were elected in 2006"
-- no doubt because the specter of Speaker Nancy
Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid sent
chills up and down the spines of all those wonkish
Sunni insurgents.
Making sure they don't alienate their jihadi
constituency in the U.S. or abroad, neither Clinton
nor Obama dared refer to our adversary in terms of
"Islam," even though moderator Charles Gibson
posited his questions in reference to "Islamic
radicals."
Of course the Republican candidates made clear
they understood who the enemy is.
John McCain was clear that "the transcendent
challenge of the 21st century is radical Islamic
extremists." Mike Huckabee said the threat we face
is "an Islamic problem... a jihadist problem... an
Islamofascism problem." Mitt Romney said,
"[T]he philosophy of radical jihadism says,
'We want to kill'." Fred Thompson insisted, "We are
in a global war with radical Islam. They declared
war on us a long, long time ago. We took note,
really, for the first time on September 11,
2001."
While the cardinal duties of the President, as
defined by our Constitution,
pertain to the security of the nation, it would
seem that the Democrats are not even willing to
define our enemy, much less acknowledge that the
jihadi WMD threat is a clear and present
danger.
Instead, since the first shots were fired to
secure freedom in Afghanistan and Iraq (keeping the
battlefront on their turf rather than ours),
Clinton and Obama have condemned our Armed Forces
operations, opting to invoke the Vietnam model: Use
their political soapbox and Leftmedia
sympathies to rally their political base.
However the effect of their actions is no
different from what it was in Vietnam: Their
political gambit greatly emboldens our enemy, and
costs American lives.
On that subject, we recently quoted a reputable
columnist who, along with some other national
commentators, made reference to the consequences of
Leftmedia and "anti-war" political campaigns when
our troops were in Vietnam. He attributed this
quote to North Vietnamese General Vo Nguyen Giap:
"We were elated to notice your media was definitely
helping us. They were causing more disruption in
America than we could in the battlefields. We were
ready to surrender after Tet. You had won!"
On further review, we determined there is not
sufficient documentation for that attribution.
However, Giap did have this to say in a 1989
interview with CBS: "We paid a high price
[during the Tet offensive] but so did you
[Americans]... not only in lives and
materiel. Do not forget the war was brought into
the living rooms of the American people.... The
most important result of the Tet offensive was it
made you de-escalate the bombing, and it brought
you to the negotiation table. It was, therefore,
a victory... The war was fought on many fronts. At
that time the most important one was American
public opinion."
More to the point, in a 1995 interview with
The Wall Street Journal, Bui Tin, a
communist contemporary of Giap and Ho Chi Minh, who
was serving as an NVA colonel assigned to the
general staff at the time Saigon fell, had this to
say about the Leftmedia and Soviet puppets like
"Hanoi"
Jane Fonda and John
Kerry: "[They were] essential to our
strategy. Support of the war from our rear was
completely secure while the American rear was
vulnerable. Every day our leadership would listen
to world news over the radio to follow the growth
of the American antiwar movement. Visits to
Hanoi by people like Jane Fonda, and former
Attorney General Ramsey Clark and ministers gave us
confidence that we should hold on in the face of
battlefield reverses."
Bui stated further, "Those people represented
the conscience of America. The conscience of
America was part of its war-making capability, and
we were turning that power in our favor. America
lost because of its democracy; through dissent and
protest it lost the ability to mobilize a will to
win."
Most notably, Bui observed, that the 1968 Tet
Offensive was "to weaken American resolve during a
presidential-election year. We had the impression
that American commanders had their hands tied by
political factors. Your generals could never deploy
a maximum force for greatest military effect."
After the war, Bui Tin served as Vice Chief
Editor for the People's Daily, the official
newspaper of the Communist Party of Vietnam.
However, he became disillusioned with the Communist
regime and, in 1990, immigrated to Europe as a
dissident.
So, is the Left's Dezinformatsia model during
Vietnam equally effective at undermining success in
Iraq? Are Clinton, Obama and their Leftmedia
minions "essential" to the jihadist strategy,
"weakening American resolve during a
presidential-election year" and emboldening our
enemy?
Consider this excerpt from a Patriot
dispatch last year: "At a recent
national-security briefing, the most senior
presenter, a vice admiral, discussed the topic
'Media as Terrain' -- how our adversaries use the
media as a battleground. He used this declassified
quote to make his point: 'I say to you: that we are
in a battle, and that more than half of this battle
is taking place in the battlefield of the media.'
That quote is from an intercepted and authenticated
communiquè between Osama bin Laden's
chief lieutenant, Sheikh Muhammad al-Zawahiri, to
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi..."
"Commander in Chief Clinton"? "Commander in
Chief Obama"? The consequences of either scenario
would result in unprecedented threats to our
national security. For the sake of our nation,
let's not go there.
The
Patriot Post
Copyright 2008 by Publius Press, Inc.
The
Patriot Post Archive
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