Today's Democratic Party is so
stridently opposed to the war in Iraq that it's hard to believe the
same party presided over most of the big military buildups of the last
century. Sometimes it seems more like the Democratic Party of Civil
War years, which impeded Lincoln's
efforts to win the war at every turn. But precisely because
Democrats are so virulently antiwar, as they have been since the Vietnam
conflict a generation ago, many voters have a wrongheaded view of where
party frontrunner Barack Obama stands on matters of war and peace.
Like the main character in Ralph Ellison's 1953 novel Invisible Man, Obama
is a victim of stereotyping -- not because he's black, but because he's
liberal.
So here's a quick quiz to
see how much you know about the national-security views of the junior
senator from Illinois.
Which candidate told Palestinians before Hamas was elected that America would never recognize their government
until it abandoned its campaign to destroy Israel? Which candidate upset
environmentalists by backing coal gasification because he thought the nation
needed greater energy independence? Which candidate voted to build a
fence along the nation's southern border to prevent unlawful crossings?
Which candidate favors the economic and political isolation of Iran if that
country continues to pursue nuclear weapons? Sounds a lot like John
McCain, but the answer is Barack Obama.
The one thing that Barack Obama
has said about war and peace that everyone remembers -- because his campaign
won't let us forget -- is his 2002 speech opposing the war in Iraq.
While other Democrats were lining up behind President Bush's ill-conceived
invasion, Obama said: "I know that even a successful war against Iraq will require a U.S. occupation of undetermined
length, at undetermined cost, with undetermined consequences. I know that
an invasion of Iraq without
a clear rationale and without strong international support will only fan the
flames of the Middle East, and encourage the
worst, rather than the best, impulses in the Arab world, and strengthen the
recruitment arm of Al Qaeda." Four thousand American lives
(and $600 billion) later, it's obvious he was right.
Obama's admirers often leave out
the next two sentences in the 2002 speech: "I am not opposed to
all wars. I am opposed to dumb wars." However,
that comment appears to reflect his actual views, since he went well
beyond what other Democratic candidates said in insisting he would attack Al
Qaeda strongholds in Pakistan
with or without the permission of the Pakistani government. In a July
2007 essay in Foreign Affairs, Obama called for reinforcing U.S. troops in Afghanistan, pressing NATO to
send more forces, and pressuring the Pakistanis to prosecute the campaign
against the Taliban more vigorously.
The national-security framework
Obama set forth in the Foreign Affairs essay was strikingly
similar to ideas that George W. Bush advanced as a presidential candidate in
1999 -- ideas about revitalizing the military for new challenges, retooling the
intelligence community, halting the spread of nuclear weapons, and combating
global terrorism. Obama's approach to pursuing those objectives would
undoubtedly look different from the Bush agenda. But once you get beyond Iraq and global
warming, Obama and McCain don't seem all that different in the way
they view the world. After serving on the Senate Foreign Relations, Homeland
Security, and Veterans' Affairs Committees for several years, Barack Obama has
assimilated the key features of the emerging security environment.
He wouldn’t need the kind of education George W. Bush did in 2001 to be a
competent Commander in Chief.