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As reactions to President Obama's Afghanistan strategy continue to pour in, we've compiled a few thoughts from Politics Daily writers to help break things down.| Deal! I support the plan. | |
|---|---|
| No Deal! I'm not buying. | |
| Deal maybe; I'm just not sure. |
Melinda Henneberger: Obama's heart wasn't in it, it didn't seem to me. And as his plan doesn't seem likely to work, who could blame him? (Well, except for every commentator on Fox News, where you'd have thought he had just run across the stage at West Point waving a white flag and shrieking, "Run for your lives!" instead of announcing a massive troop increase. It's official, as of last night: There is nothing our current president could do, ever, to earn even the grudging respect of these critics.
Walter Shapiro: For historians, the lasting importance of Barack Obama's West Point speech may have nothing to do with Afghanistan itself. Instead, the significant passage was the president's candid admission that America is tapped out after spending (squandering?) $1 trillion in Iraq and Afghanistan. As Obama put it, "We can't simply afford to ignore the price of these wars." This all seems sadly reminiscent of post-war Britain abandoning its commitments east of Suez. Harry Truman's America was there to step in to defend Greece and Turkey against the communists. But who is left to take over for us?
David Corn: Obama did pound the basics: The Taliban must be countered so Afghanistan is never again protected territory for the mass-murderers of al-Qaeda, who, the president said, seek nuclear weapons. Prior to the speech, polls showed that about half of the American public was skeptical of the Afghanistan war. Presumably, these Americans already know al-Qaeda's plotters are evildoers. So this speech is not likely to sway millions. But what's been said a few thousand times in the past few days is definitely true: Obama has now made the Afghanistan war his own. This speech was just the opening shot in what will be a never-ending campaign to explain and justify a war that itself may be never-ending.
Matt Lewis: President Obama needed to use his tremendous rhetorical skills to inspire Americans to rally around this cause. Great presidents summon their rhetorical skills on such occasions, and that's why Obama was quite correct when he said during the campaign that words do matter. He should be using his teaching ability to explain why this mission is worth pursuing. Sadly, at West Point, he failed on both fronts. When I think of inspiring wartime speeches from great leaders such as Lincoln and FDR, Reagan and Churchill, it becomes obvious to me that Obama is not in their league.
Jill Lawrence: Obama is more eloquent than many previous American presidents, and more given to revealing his thought process. His speech may or may not earn him some breathing room on Afghanistan, but it was effective in its way. He came across as a thoughtful commander in chief committed to protecting the country and doing his best by his troops. He explained and defended his decisions and countered much of the criticism coming at him, including some arguments he said he takes very seriously. . . . As I mentioned in my fuller analysis, he was handed two wars that he didn't start. The way he resolves the one in Afghanistan could lead to a debacle for his party at the polls, but he does not intend to pass it on to the next president.
Carl M. Cannon: This president and his youthful speechwriting team always seem on perilous ground when they justify their actions with history lessons. With World War II in mind, President Obama told the cadets that America was not as young a nation "and perhaps not as innocent" as when Franklin Roosevelt was president. That's an uninformed notion. Americans in the 1930s were a rough and realistic people, hardened by economic Depression and left cynical about U.S. involvement in foreign wars -- precisely because a consensus had formed among working-class Americans that the U.S. effort in World War I was a colossal waste of lives, money and effort.
Bruce Drake: Obama delivered a concise and clear speech, and made a targeted effort to address the criticisms that others have made about the direction they thought he was going. But I believe there is a dynamic after eight years of Iraq and Afghanistan where the public believes it is hearing the same story over and over again. So, beneath the broad strokes of what the president laid out, questions remain: Are ground-level strategies being put in place that will actually achieve Obama's goals? What really will win over the civilian population? What really will get President Karzai to do something about corruption, when push comes to shove? What really is going to make a difference in the Afghanistan-Pakistan borderlands that Obama correctly singled out as the epicenter of the threat? These concerns have been on the table for years, but beyond identifying them, little has been convincingly said about how they will be -- or can be -- addressed.Follow Politics Daily
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