by: Grebner
Sun Aug 10, 2008 at 17:21:21 PM EDT
I don’t know anything about foreign policy, but I know that Russian tanks are rolling across its small southern neighbor in an unprovoked invasion. It doesn’t appear from news accounts that “tension” or “misunderstanding” is at the center of the clash; the only question is exactly what Putin has decided to do.
War is bad news for Democrats and liberals. (Of course, it’s actually bad news for all living things, but somebody else can work up that theme. Here I’m talking about political calculations.) When the public gets scared, they rally ’round the flag, and the best flag-wavers are Republicans. Every sensible suggestion that a Democrat would propose, like trying to organize Europe into a united front, can be quickly warped into sound-bites about “appeasement” and “weakness”.
This is a hell of a time to have the entire U.S. military machine pinned down in an irrelevant war against – I’m sorry, who exactly are we fighting in Iraq? It sure makes our saber-rattling against Iran seem stupid. You have to wonder the feasibility of additional troops in Afghanistan. But that’s not what the public is going to think, if Russian troops continue marching south and overthrow the elected government in Georgia. Nobody’s going to spend time thinking how W‘s stupidity facilitated the outbreak of real war, by his fixation on his childish “Mission Accomplished”. When the world turns bellicose, hardliners flourish, and reason retreats.
At this writing, neither presidential candidate shows signs they’re paying attention. If I were running Obama’s campaign, I’d be spending a lot of attention right now on how to establish a position that will strike the public as “strong” and “firm”, and worrying like hell about saying anything that the Cheneys and Limbaughs of the world could seize on.
If we’re lucky, and Putin is really bluffing and plans to limit his involvement, maybe it won’t turn out to be a big deal. But if Putin has already made up his mind to effectively re-annex Georgia, it can’t help but profoundly change U.S. political calculations.
One thing is sure: N.A.T.O. membership isn’t going to be thought “quaint” or “redundant” by anybody east of the Rhine again for at least 50 years.
This is of course the same Vladimer Putin of whom W said:
I looked the man in the eye. I found him to be very straightforward and trustworthy. We had a very good dialogue. I was able to get a sense of his soul; a man deeply committed to his country and the best interests of his country. And I appreciated so very much the frank dialogue.There was no kind of diplomatic chit-chat, trying to throw each other off balance. There was a straightforward dialogue. And that’s the beginning of a very constructive relationship. I wouldn’t have invited him to my ranch if I didn’t trust him.
I find myself amazed that I could discover new levels of incompetence in our President, but I can. Allowing the U.S. to be played for a sucker by a guy holding nothing but a pair of nines – and threatening to allow Russia and Putin to get back into the game for real.
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