Is
the GOP Becoming a War Party?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Obama's
Remaking of America
Denouncing
Republican "bluster" about war with Iran, President Obama went on
the offensive Tuesday:
"Those who
are ... beating the drums of war should explain clearly to the American
people what they think the costs and benefits would be."
The president
had in mind such remarks as those Newt Gingrich delivered to the
Israeli lobby AIPAC that same day: "The red line is now ... because
the Iranians are deepening their commitment to nuclear weapons"
– an assertion the Joint Chiefs and U.S. intelligence agencies say
is blatantly false.
They insist:
Iran has not made the decision to build a bomb.
Perhaps the
president was referring to Mitt Romney's pledge to that same cheering
throng to "station multiple carriers and warships at Iran's door"
and deny Tehran even "the capacity to make a bomb."
But if "the
capacity to make a bomb" means knowledge of how to build one and
an ability to enrich uranium to bomb-grade, should they decide to
do so, Iran already has that.
Does Mitt want
war now?
Perhaps the
president had in mind John McCain's call for U.S. air strikes on
Syria, an act of war rejected even by GOP Speaker John Boehner as
"premature," since the "situation in Syria is pretty complicated."
Have the Republican
uber-hawks learned nothing from the war for which they beat the
drums 10 years ago?
Then they told
us Saddam Hussein was implicated in 9/11, that he had chemical weapons,
that if we didn't invade his country we could expect anthrax attacks
by Iraqi crop-dusters up and down our East Coast.
Those who asked
for proof Saddam was a mortal threat were dismissed by Condi Rice:
"There will always be some uncertainty about how quickly Saddam
can acquire nuclear weapons. But we don't want the smoking gun to
be a mushroom cloud."
The price of
our heeding that bluster? Some 4,500 American dead, 35,000 wounded,
$1 trillion sunk, 100,000 Iraqi dead, half a million widows and
orphans.
The fruits
of our victory? A Shia-dominated Iraq descending into sectarian
and civil war.
The GOP's political
reward for marching us up to Baghdad?
Loss of both
houses of Congress in 2006 and the White House in 2008, when the
antiwar Obama crushed the war hawk McCain.
Today's GOP
front-runners – Newt, Mitt and Rick Santorum – all clearly believe
that a warlike stance toward Iran will appeal to the evangelical
base and to Jewish voters who went for Obama by 57 points in 2008.
But they are
rolling the dice with a war-weary America.
Ron Paul, whose
youth vote the party needs and who receives the largest number of
contributions from the military, has split with them on Iran.
The president,
says Paul, is "closer to my position than the other candidates,
because what the other Republicans are saying is reckless."
Most Republicans
seem to be lining up with Newt, Mitt and Rick on a more hawkish
stance. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell wants Congress to
vote the president a blank check for war now. And the president
is aware of and alarmed by the Republican stampede to war:
"The notion
that the way to solve every one of these problems is to deploy our
military – that hasn't been true in the past and it won't be true
now. ... Sometimes, it's necessary, but we don't do it casually.
... We think it through. We don't play politics with it."
When rash decisions
are made about war, said the president, mistakes are made, and "typically
it's not the folks who are popping off who pay the price."
What to do
about Iran – and whom to trust to deal with Iran – seems fated to
be the foreign policy issue of 2012.
And the battle
lines are drawn.
Bibi Netanyahu,
the Israeli lobby and its allies in Congress will be demanding ever
harsher sanctions and military action before November. For they
assume, rightly, that the president does not want war and, if he
wins, there will be no war with Iran.
The Republicans
will portray Obama as dithering, vacillating and weak, no true friend
of Israel, though the U.S. military and intelligence community are
behind Obama in his belief that a war now on Iran would be unnecessary,
unwise and potentially calamitous.
Nervous Democrats,
facing Sheldon Adelson super PAC ads in the Jewish communities of
every swing state, all accusing Obama of "throwing Israel under
the bus," will be pressuring the president to get tougher.
And
Obama surely knows that an October confrontation with Iran, with
war a possibility, or a reality, will mean the nation rallies around
him and he wins a second term.
Will Iranian
intransigence provide him a casus belli? Or will Iran negotiate
seriously and agree to more intrusive inspections to prove its nuclear
program is not aimed at a bomb?
Whether there
is a U.S. war on Iran seems up to the ayatollah now. Will he play
into the hands of Israeli and American hawks who are salivating
over a war with his regime and his country?
March
9, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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