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War Stories

So it seems that a significant part of the Obama military anecdote that so many have denounced as nonsense that shows Obama’s ignorance of such matters was independently confirmed by the officer in question (the weapon shortage element was not confirmed).  According to the report of the officer’s story, his platoon had 15 of its members reassigned before their deployment in mid-2003.  One of the standard lines of attack I have seen leveled against this anecdote is: they would never split up a unit, because this hurts unit cohesion.  The more appropriate response would be, as far as I can see, grave concern that the anecdote might be true, given the administration’s reputation for incompetence, and anger if it was confirmed.  After all, this would be one of those concrete examples of how the obsession with Iraq directly, measurably harmed not only the Afghan war effort but also the cohesion and effectiveness of military units.  That’s the sort of thing that ostensibly “pro-military” people would have (correctly) found outrageous and appalling if it had it happened on Clinton’s watch, but which they regard as a legend when it brings disrepute on the administration and U.S.. Iraq policy.  What’s even more strange is that we already know that intelligence and linguistics personnel were pulled away from Afghanistan to be used for the war in Iraq, so why would it surprise us that a similar hollowing out of combat units sent to Afghanistan took place, at least in certain cases?

Update: When the critics aren’t accusing Obama’s source of lying, they are emphasising that he didn’t support every detail of the story as Obama recounted it and that reassigning soldiers from a unit is so perfectly normal that there’s nothing to see here.  Which is rather different from the legions of geniuses who said that it never happens.  The point of the story, of course, is not whether it is normal to reassign soldiers to units that are going into combat, but that the one military campaign pulled personnel away from the Afghan war and that this has put the units deploying to  Afghanistan at more of a disadvantage than they would otherwise be.  The point of the story is that full-strength units were important enough for Iraq, and not important enough for Afghanistan, which confirms the larger argument that Iraq has diverted resources away from Afghanistan.  Resources have been diverted, and the unnecessary war in Iraq has detracted from the necessary one in Afghanistan.  That is the argument these people don’t want to have, because they are no closer today to having a compelling rationale for being in Iraq than they did in 2003.

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James Buchanan's Bum Rap

Okay, I’m on a short break.  Here’s a quick post. 

George Will has fun at Hillary Clinton’s expense, concluding with this non sequitur paragraph:

The president who came to office with the most glittering array of experiences had served 10 years in the House of Representatives, then became minister to Russia, then served 10 years in the Senate, then four years as secretary of state (during a war that enlarged the nation by 33 percent), then was minister to Britain. Then, in 1856, James Buchanan was elected president and in just one term secured a strong claim to being ranked as America’s worst president.  Abraham Lincoln, the inexperienced former one-term congressman, had an easy act to follow.

Buchanan gets his bad reputation not for anything he did for almost his entire term, but for what he refused to do during the final months of his administration.  Most people have no clue what Buchanan did during his term, but they all know that he did not mobilise an army to kill tens and hundreds of thousands of Americans.  For this, he is judged an egregious failure, while the man who did just that continues to be revered as a deified hero.  This follows the typical rule of nationalist historiography here and in almost every country: the politicians and rulers who are responsible for the most deaths are judged the greatest because they oversaw “great crises.”  Even though these crises didn’t necessarily have to result in bloodshed, and even if the pols in question blundered or willingly made the crisis worse, the more blood that is shed the better for their posthumous reputations.  Of course, when the same things are done by rulers of other countries, people are able to spot very easily the sketchy arguments for regarding them as wise and great leaders of men.  French nationalists will revere Napoleon, while we see him as a blood-soaked despot, and the same used to be true of Germans and Bismarck before it became entirely impossible to be a German natonalist, and Chinese nationalists admire either the modern Mao or have reached way back to raise Shih huang-di on a pedestal.  The general rule of such “great leaders” is that you probably didn’t want to live under their government, since the chances were good that you would be conscripted, killed or otherwise harmed by their policies.

As I read Will, he seems to be arguing on behalf of the least experienced contender in the presidential race, who happens to be Hillary Clinton at this point, which means that he has just compared her to Abraham Lincoln.  So is he saying that Hillary Clinton’s election would usher in an era of mass fratricide, or is he saying that she is the next Great Emancipator?  Maybe both?

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The Round-up

As I try to finish the draft of my final dissertation chapter, I won’t have much new posting for the next day or two, so hereisacollectionofafewpostsfromthismonththatmightbeworth your time if you haven’t seen them before.

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Another Obama Post

At the risk of Obama overkill this week, here is a post of mine at Takimag on Obama and foreign policy.

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The Huck Dance

Via Patrick Appel, this leaves all of those awful Clinton supporter-created musical numbers in the dust.  Huckabee is the obvious tribune of religious disco voters everywhere, which means that he has locked down the support of Josh, the strange hymn-singing guy from the third installment in the epic Stillman trilogy, The Last Days of Disco.  He was the one who declared, “Disco will never be over.”  Huckabee seems to have the same view of his presidential campaign.

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Bold Leadership

A different point about Obama’s legislative record: forget the debate over whether “Obama has substance” (he has, but a lot of his supporters couldn’t tell you what it is) for a moment, and consider what his most notable achievements are.  For the great Unifier, he has done most of his successful bipartisan work on things that are fairly uncontroversial (ethics reform, securing loose Russian nukes).  On anything contentious, Obama has not shown much facility for “bringing people together,” because he knows that these issues are contentious because people have genuine, perhaps even principled, disagreements over them, and he has many of the same disagreements as his most liberal colleagues.  The lie behind the bipartisanship obsession is that there is a supposed lack of bipartisanship because of some failure of leadership or imagination, when, in fact, bipartisanship is lacking because of fundamental differences over certain questions.  When it is a procedural reform or a blindingly obvious national security issue, bipartisanship is easy because no one really disagrees or has strong opposition to the measure, and when it isn’t easy because there is actual political risk in crossing the aisle Obama is nowhere to be found.   

As others have said, by Obama’s own standard, Obama fails.

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Mr. President, We Cannot Allow A Hope Gap

Skip to 8 minute mark in this recording of Michelle Obama’s speech at UCLA.  Shortly after that point she says this:

Barack Obama will require you to work. He is going to demand that you shed your cynicism. That you put down your divisions. That you come out of your isolation, that you move out of your comfort zones. That you push yourselves to be better. And that you engage. Barack will never allow you to go back to your lives as usual, uninvolved, uninformed.

Apparently we are all activists now.  There is something amusing about the idea that a political movement that has so far thrived on uninformed people being won over by cheery slogans is going to become a dedicated band of civically-minded, “engaged” and hopeful Stakhanovites.  In a certain context, these remarks could be taken simply as expressions of strong conviction, but that doesn’t seem to be what she’s saying.  She isn’t expressing the extent of Obama’s conviction, but instead is telling the voters that they are going to have to shape up considerably if they are going to be worthy of toiling in the fields of hope.

Michael once wrote about Mike Huckabee’s candidacy representing the introduction of the “life coach” ethos into presidential politics:

Unlike Obama or Bush before him, Huckabee asks us not only to rise above partisanship but to rise above ourselves.

This is a vision of the executive as “Uplifter in Chief,” the role Huckabee seems most anxious to play: “The president of the United States ought to lead Americans to think the best, be the best and act the best. We ought not pander to the lowest common denominator of thought.” It’s a message alternately inspiring in its aspirations and smug in its condescension.

Now it seems clear that Obama is the one who wants to play that role, or at least he allows his wife to cast him in the role.  You have to marvel at the use of so many phrases implying coercion, rather than persuasion: require, demand, never allow.  I’m sorry, but in a still nominally free country the chief magistrate of a republic does not make demands of citizens, but enforces the laws enacted by their representatives.  That is what the President does, or is supposed to do.  He does not, cannot, rightfully require things of any citizen that the citizen does not already owe to his country, namely loyalty and patriotic service.  That is what he is allowed to ask from us, because it is something we are already obliged to render.  It is not he who permits and allows, but, at least in theory, we who permit him to serve us.  He will not be a jefe or archigos to whom we are swearing personal allegiance (despite the confusion of some Bush supporters on this point), but a public servant who executes the laws and obeys the Constitution.

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Accomplishments? Who Needs Accomplishments?

The vacuity of Obama supporters is there for all to see.

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The Tough Guys

I’ve got news for all the latte-drinking, Prius-driving, Birkenstock-wearing, trust fund babies crowding in to hear him speak! This guy won’t last a round against the Republican attack machine. He’s a poet, not a fighter. ~Tom Buffenbarger

Meanwhile, Obama racks up the endorsement of the Boilermakers and will soon have the Teamsters as well.  Obviously, nothing says “latte-drinking” like James Hoffa. 

It may be right that Obama will fare poorly against Republican attacks, and I do think that the impression he leaves that he is somehow above it all will dissatisfy Democrats who prefer a more combative, brawler style.  However, the electoral reality that used to support this critique of Obama as the candidate of wine-track yuppies and spoiled college kids has changed.  In Wisconsin he prevailed with the support of many low-income Midwestern white voters whose support he hadn’t received on this scale before in the nominating contest.  The regular Democratic voters, the “Mondale coalition” types, who were Clinton’s bedrock, have begun moving to him.  Complaints like the one above are the yelps of those constituencies that backed the wrong horse.  They are now striking out angrily, because this is not how it’s supposed to work.  The establishment candidate is supposed to lock down the core constituencies of the party, and the drippy progressive protest candidate is supposed to go away after “injecting new ideas” into the debate.  That is the way it has worked in the modern nominating process for almost thirty years, so you can imagine how the people who sided with the establishment in this cycle are feeling ripped off.

Update: Apparently the crowd Buffenbarger was addressing started booing him, and others were trying to shoo him off the stage.  It’s a good thing the Clintons have a solid, disciplined campaign operation, or else they might have problems!

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The Shape Of Things To Come

Now that the remarkable size of Obama’s Wisconsin victory is clear (a 17-point margin), it seems right to say that it’s really all over on the Democratic side except for the crying.  The Democrats have marched themselves over the cliff.  They have nominated the one candidate who can lose them an election they should never have lost.  They are responsible for the coming McCain Administration.  I hope they’re happy.

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