The Courtier Chronicles

EDITORIAL President Obama In politics, as one suspects in life, no good deed goes unpunished. John McCain staked everything on success in Iraq. He advocated the surge publicly and made the...

...He defended it passionately and intelligently, and was indispensable in beating back critics, shoring up nervous supporters, and keeping enough public support for the surge so the Democratic party’s repeated efforts to abort it failed...
...By the fall of 2008, McCain got no credit for one of the great acts of statesmanship by a senator—let alone a senator who was also a presidential candidate—in American history...
...Voters were able in 1992 to take peace for granted and to focus on domestic policy...
...The positive outcome of a reasonably stable, democratic, and friendly Iraq is now in sight...
...So Americans elected Ronald Reagan and George H.W...
...Thanks in large part to John McCain, the United States is on the verge of snatching victory from the jaws of defeat...
...It’s not quite the cosmic injustice of the British electorate rejecting Churchill in 1945—but it’s no small injustice either...
...We pledge our support for those of his policies we can support, our willingness to give him the benefi t of the doubt in cases of uncertainty, and our constructive criticism and loyal opposition where we are compelled to differ...
...Thanks in large part to John McCain, we did not have a second Vietnam-like humiliation...
...EDITORIAL President Obama In politics, as one suspects in life, no good deed goes unpunished...
...It worked better than even its proponents expected...
...Cole in Aden, killing 17 servicemen and wounding 39...
...William Kristol...
...In October 2000, after eight years of the Clinton administration, a strengthening al Qaeda attacked the U.S.S...
...We’re pleased that the president-elect is committed to building up the military, succeeding in Afghanistan, defending our allies, and, of course, keeping the country safe...
...The voters elected Richard Nixon to extricate us from the quagmire in Vietnam with honor, which he did, and Gerald Ford attempted to prevent the Democratic Congress from walking away from our ally and our responsibility...
...But most voters did not let keeping us safe at home, any more than winning a war abroad, determine their vote...
...McCain lost in part because everyone wanted a change from President Bush, and McCain was from the same party as Bush...
...It’s the economy, stupid” was stupid but successful just as its equivalents had been in 1976 and 1960...
...We ended up winning a war, and he ended up losing the election...
...Bush also drove Saddam Hussein from Kuwait...
...But, the much-derided Bush administration (and they deserve some of the derision) did succeed in preventing a second terrorist attack in the United States over the last seven years...
...The strategic and moral calamity of an American withdrawal in defeat from the central front in the war on Islamic jihadism was averted...
...John McCain said repeatedly that he’d rather lose an election than lose a war...
...Encouraging Americans’ tendency to take hard-won national security successes for granted—once they are won—is the key to how Democrats, in modern times, win presidential elections...
...This fact, like Iraq, barely came up in the presidential campaign...
...He advocated the surge publicly and made the case for it privately...
...We think it was a similar mistake to select Barack Obama over John McCain in 2008...
...Voters were unimpressed by the peace and stability of 1960 and chose John Kennedy...
...We at THE WEEKLY STANDARD congratulate Barack Obama on his impressive victory...
...We hope President Obama’s policies and decisions will strengthen the nation he will now lead, and that our country and the cause of freedom in the world will emerge from the next four or eight years even stronger than they are today...
...The surge worked...
...Voters decided, however, to give the presidency back to the party of JFK and LBJ—by this time more the party of George McGovern—and we got the Iranian revolution and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan...
...And as a result of the remarkable progress in Iraq over the past two years—progress whose possibility was scoffed at and whose reality was then denied by all leading Democrats except Joe Lieberman—Iraq faded as an issue in the presidential race...
...Dwight Eisenhower pursued a cautious but not ineffective foreign policy...
...Al Qaeda today seems in retreat...
...No such thing happened in 2008...
...We hope we’re proved wrong...
...Partly as a result of Kennedy’s initial weakness, the Berlin Wall went up and the Cuban Missile Crisis followed— and then, partly out of a felt need of Lyndon Johnson’s to appear strong, we escalated in Vietnam...
...And with it, the critical question of who should be commander in chief also receded...
...Bush, and—stunningly—they won the Cold War virtually without fi ring a shot...
...We’re encouraged that President-elect Obama has seemed at times during this campaign to understand it’s a dangerous world, that he’ll be tested, and that weakness is provocative and dangerous...
...President Obama will now be able to draw down in an orderly manner, following (we trust) the guidance of Generals Petraeus and Odierno—generals who consulted with McCain often and whose achievement McCain helped make possible...

Vol. 14 • November 2008 • No. 9


 
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