|
|
« Previous Politics | Next Politics » |
|
Conference Calling on McCain
ByI see McCain as basically losing on this round. It's bizarre of his campaign to be trotting out talking points that didn't work for Hillary Clinton, and already before the Obama campaign's official counterspin got underway we have Spencer Ackerman kicking McCain's ass and, indeed, Joe Klein calling McCain soft on al-Qaeda in the MSM.
More broadly, on experience there's a three-pronged attack. First, Obama does have experience, with Rice citing the fact that he authored "crucial legislation to secure the United States from the threat of loose nuclear materials" and serves on committees and subcommittees dealing with foreign relations, veterans affairs, and homeland security. Second, this means that Obama has actually "acquired more traditional washington foreign policy experience" than most presidents including Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and Jimmy Carter (Carter in fact served on a nuclear sub and I'm told this gave him a better understanding of nuclear issues than presidents before or after).
Third, there's more to life than being a prisoner of DC conventional wisdom -- "McCain, like Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney may have years of Washington experience" but they've all made "flawed judgments and as a consequence we're less safe." In a crucial point, Rice observed (emphasis added) that a McCain administration would be "very much a continuation and intensification of the failed Bush policy, remaining in Iraq indefinitely not investing adequately in Afghanistan." According to Rice we need to "show that we have learned from our mistakes in Iraq and elsewhere and are prepared to cooperate and collaborate on the challenges we face," namely al-Qaeda, nuclear proliferation, and climate change.
I know Steve Clemons has expressed some concerns that Team Obama may have a problematic unwillingness to set priorities in foreign policy, but I thought Rice was admirably clear here. The question of cooperation and the question of priorities goes hand-in-hand. When you're willing to define what it is you think is really important, then the stage has been set for other countries to work with you. The kind of deterioration in America's ability to cooperate with other countries that we've seen over the past seven years stems not just from "cowboy diplomacy" but from Bush's grandiosity and lack of focus.






























Join the Discussion
After you comment, click Post. If you’re not already logged in you will be asked to log in or register. blog comments powered by Disqus