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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated

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From: LindyBill9/23/2010 10:19:11 PM
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"Commentary » Blog Archive » A Devastating and Depressing Portrait of Obama

The Washington Post's story on Bob Woodward's forthcoming book, Obama's Wars, includes these passages:

Obama rejected the military's request for 40,000 troops as part of an expansive mission that had no foreseeable end. "I'm not doing 10 years," he told Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton at a meeting on Oct. 26, 2009. "I'm not doing long-term nation-building. I am not spending a trillion dollars." … At one strategy session, the president waved a memo from the Office of Management and Budget, which put a price tag of $889 billion over 10 years on the military's open-ended approach.

So we finally found the one institution where Barack Obama is frugal and interested in cost-savings: the military during time of war.

It is quite revealing that this most profligate of presidents — whose spending is nearly limitless when it comes to health care, stimulus packages, bailouts, and non-defense discretionary program — has found his inner Barry Goldwater when it comes to spending on defense matters.

There are two problems for Obama. The first centers on Article II, Section II, of the Constitution, which states, "The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States." The president's primary responsibility, as envisioned by the Founders, is to serve as commander in chief, not as the tax collector for the welfare state. "Among the many objects to which a wise and free people find it necessary to direct their attention," John Jay wrote in Federalist No. 3, "is that of providing for their safety seems to be first."

Mr. Obama seems to have his priorities upside down — largely indifferent to those areas he's responsible for and hyper-active in areas he's not.

Second, the military, more than any other branch of the federal government, is showing remarkable results for its work. It has reformed and modernized itself in important respects, advanced the cause of liberty, delivered lethal blows to our enemies, and protected us from harm. Yet with America engaged in a hot war in Afghanistan, where the consequences of failure would be catastrophic, President Obama has decided to be hyper-thrifty with his spending. He repeatedly limits what his generals, including General Petraeus, believe they need to successfully prosecute the war.

Quite apart from being reckless, Obama is reinforcing almost every bad impression of his party: keen on raising taxes, spending record amounts on domestic programs, centralizing power, and expanding the size and reach of the federal government. When it comes to war, though, Obama is conflicted and uncertain, in search of an exit ramp more than victory, and even willing to subordinate security needs to partisan concerns (most especially by insisting on an arbitrary drawdown date of July 2011 in order to please his political advisers). As Politico reports,

the president's timetable to begin a real drawdown … is considerably more concrete than once thought. The book … has Obama warning the Pentagon that he won't tolerate a 10-year war that sacrifices American troops, bleeds the treasury or drains his own popularity with the Democratic base.

By most accounts (see here and here), the White House is pleased with how the president is portrayed in Obama's Wars. It shouldn't be. The president comes across, at least in the stories released so far, as a man deeply uncomfortable in his role as commander in chief.

It is a devastating, and depressing, portrait.

This entry was posted on Thursday, September 23rd, 2010 at 8:45 AM and is filed under Contentions. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site."

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