Is
Hagel Out of the Mainstream?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: America's
Coming Gun War
"Chuck Hagel
is out of the mainstream of thinking ... on most issues regarding
foreign policy," says GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham. Neocon William Kristol
concurs: Hagel is "out on the fringes."
But where,
exactly, is the mainstream on foreign policy in 2013?
Since the Bush
II years, "the three amigos" – Sens. Graham, John McCain, and Joe
Lieberman – have clamored for new wars.
"We are all
Georgians now!" thundered McCain when Vladimir Putin was thrashing
the Georgians for attacking South Ossetia.
"Bomb, bomb,
bomb – bomb, bomb Iran," trilled McCain in 2008 in parody of the
Beach Boys' "Barbara Ann."
Ten days ago,
McCain, Graham and Lieberman urged the U.S. to impose a no-fly zone
over Syria, provide weapons to the rebels and send Patriot missile
batteries to protect northern Syria. And what has been the response
to their calls for air strikes and new wars? The sound of silence.
George W. Bush
ignored McCain on Georgia, and in 2008 McCain was crushed by a dovish
Democrat who had opposed the Iraq War.
Like Hagel,
who voted for the Iraq War, a majority of Americans have come to
believe that 8-year war was a mistake. Even some neocons have expressed
second thoughts.
Obama pulled
all U.S. troops out of Iraq and is pulling them out of Afghanistan,
and he won easy re-election over the more hawkish Mitt Romney. And
has anyone heard any echo of the amigos' call to plunge into Syria's
civil war, outside the editorial pages of The Washington Post
and The Wall Street Journal, and the little magazines of
the neocons?
Let's do our
nation-building here at home, Obama said in the debates.
Any doubt this
idea had been poll-tested as a winner?
How many Americans
today are saying that what we did in Libya, Iraq and Afghanistan
was worth doing and should serve as America's model for dealing
with Syria and Iran?
From 2001 to
2005, McCain, Graham and Lieberman were in the mainstream. Those
were the days of bipartisan votes for war, of "either you are with
us, or you are with the terrorists," of our goal being "to end tyranny
in our world." Those were the days of the democracy crusade of George
W. Bush.
But that was
yesterday. The crusade is over. Americans want the crusaders home.
This is not
an argument for mindlessly seeking out and parroting mainstream
thought. If the amigos believe that intervening in Syria and war
with Iran are essential to the national security, they should continue
to say so.
Nothing wrong
with being out of step with majority opinion, if that is where one
believes that truth and wisdom lie.
But the amigos
and neocons deceive themselves if they think that in their hostility
to Hagel's views they occupy the mainstream.
Set aside the
nonsense about homophobia and anti-Semitism. What, at bottom, are
Hagel's views? Where does he part company with much of the Senate
GOP? What are the substantive disagreements?
First, Hagel
believes in direct communication with our enemies, be it Hezbollah,
Hamas, Iran or Cuba. Second, he believes war is a last resort to
be undertaken only after all diplomacy has failed, and war should
not be undertaken unless vital interests are imperiled.
Third, he believes
a Pentagon budget as large as all the defense budgets of the other
190 nations combined is bloated and too big to carry when, as Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs Adm. Mike Mullen said, the deficit and debt
are the greatest strategic threats to the United States.
On communicating
with enemies, was Richard Nixon, who rescued Israel in the Yom Kippur
War, wrong to go to Egypt and Syria, and meet with Anwar Sadat and
Hafez Assad, who had launched the war?
Was Yitzhak
Rabin wrong to negotiate with Yasser Arafat, his enemy, to achieve
the Oslo Accords? Was Bibi Netanyahu wrong to give Hebron to Arafat
or deal with Hamas for the return of Pvt. Gilad Shalit, in exchange
for 1,000 Palestinian prisoners?
Was it not
absurd that, to get a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel, both parties
had to go to Hosni Mubarak, because the world's superpower does
not allow itself to talk to Hamas?
If we are going
to cut a deal with Iran where it retains the right to peaceful nuclear
power, but we get solid guarantees of no bomb, how do we do that
without sending representatives to negotiate the deal with Iran?
Is
a nation that kept an embassy in the Third Reich eight years, whose
presidents sat down with Stalin and Mao, now fearful of being contaminated
by having to sit across a table from Raoul Castro?
Hagel speaks
for the realist school of foreign policy, and he can speak for the
nation. For he reflects the views of a president who just won another
decisive vote of confidence from that nation.
Sorry, Sen.
Graham, you are no longer in the mainstream.
That river
changed course, half a decade ago.
January
12, 2013
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
© 2013 Creators Syndicate
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