Victor Davis Hanson explains what's at stake in this year's election.
Just as a presidency of earlier ossified liberals like Michael Dukakis or Walter Mondale probably would have led to support of a utopian nuclear freeze and subsequent Russian intimidation of Europe, unilateral cuts in military preparedness, and acquiescence to the Soviet Union, so too the election of John Kerry may well undo much of what has been achieved these last three years as we return to the old, normal way of doing business.With Howard Dean gone, Kerry realizes that suddenly he must move rightward to sound tougher than George Bush. Finally, he seems to understand that every northern liberal Democrat in the last 30 years who ran to the left on national security lost badly like McGovern, Mondale, and Dukakis. And so Mr. Kerry abruptly will have to talk grandly of what he would have done to make us more secure. Yet a better guide is his own record in opposing defense programs, in harboring a chronic suspicion of using American force, and his own contradictory past votes about deployments to the Middle East.
More likely, if President Bush loses, the war against terror will return, as promised, to the status of a police matter subpoenas and court trials the more appropriate response to the mass murder of 3,000 at the "crime scene" of the crater in New York. Europe will be assured that our troops will stay while we apologize for the usual litany of purported unilateral sins. North Korea will get more blackmail cash, while pampered South Korean leftists resume their "sunshine" mirage. Iraq will be turned over to the U.N. as we abruptly leave, and could dissolve into something like the Balkans between 1991 and 1998. Iran and Syria will let out a big sigh of relief as American diplomats once more sit out on the tarmac in vain hopes of an "audience" with despots. The Saudis will smile that smile. Arafat will be assured that he is now once again a legitimate interlocutor. And strangest of all, the American Left will feel that the United States has just barely begun to return to its "moral" bearings even as its laxity and relativism encourage some pretty immoral things to come.
If White House politicos figured that many who were angered about out-of-control federal spending and immigration proposals would grumble, but not abandon Mr. Bush given the global stakes involved after September 11, and the specter of a new alternative foreign policy far to the left of that of a Warren Christopher and Madeline Albright then they were absolutely right.
UPDATE: Here's more, via Pejman. Is Kerry really serious here (or anywhere?): Kerry voted for the war in Iraq because he believed that President Bush didn't mean what he said, and because the President didn't lie (presumably, as Kerry believes the President should), the President implicitly lied? WTF???
Yah, Bush misled Kerry and other Democrats because, unlike Clinton, he meant what he said!
That's why we need a Democrat in the White House. You just can't run a foreign policy in such a simplisme way, saying what you mean and doing what you say.
"More likely, if President Bush loses, the war against terror will return, as promised, to the status of a police matter subpoenas and court trials the more appropriate response to the mass murder of 3,000 at the "crime scene" of the crater in New York. Europe will be assured that our troops will stay while we apologize for the usual litany of purported unilateral sins. North Korea will get more blackmail cash, while pampered South Korean leftists resume their "sunshine" mirage. Iraq will be turned over to the U.N. as we abruptly leave, and could dissolve into something like the Balkans between 1991 and 1998. Iran and Syria will let out a big sigh of relief as American diplomats once more sit out on the tarmac in vain hopes of an "audience" with despots. The Saudis will smile that smile. Arafat will be assured that he is now once again a legitimate interlocutor. And strangest of all, the American Left will feel that the United States has just barely begun to return to its "moral" bearings even as its laxity and relativism encourage some pretty immoral things to come."
Can this idiot provide any evidence backing up these statements? Where, for instance, has Kerry called for a law enforcement only solution to the international war on terror?
My gosh, how dishonest!
Posted by: andrew R on March 6, 2004 06:15 PMWhy, perhaps he heard it from Kerry:
The president took issue with Kerrys statement that the war on al-Qaida and other terrorist groups is "far less of a military operation and far more of an intelligence-gathering, law enforcement operation."
How dishonest, taking Kerry at his word.