The Right Opinion
The President as Planetary Policeman
If you don't count Clint Eastwood, whose rambling, Bob Newhartesque conversation with an empty chair included implicit criticism of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Rand Paul may have been the only speaker at the Republican National Convention last week who questioned his party's mindless militarism. The Kentucky senator said, "Republicans must acknowledge that not every dollar spent on the military is necessary or well-spent."
That mild rebuke -- which came, fittingly enough, from the son of the Texas congressman whose resistance to promiscuous interventionism distinguished him from the other contenders for the GOP's 2012 presidential nomination -- was no match for the foreign policy vision endorsed by the rest of the speakers, which amounted to a full-throated declaration of war on tyrants throughout the world. This view of America as the righter of all wrongs is hard to reconcile with Republican promises of fiscal responsibility.
John McCain, the GOP standard-bearer in 2008, posited in his convention speech that "it is our willingness to shape world events for the better that has kept us safe, increased our prosperity, preserved our liberty and transformed human history." The Arizona senator called not only for a continuing occupation of Afghanistan but also for U.S. intervention in Iran, Syria and every other place where "people are seizing control of their own destinies" by "liberating themselves from oppressive rulers."
Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice likewise argued that the United States, through military force and foreign aid in support of "free peoples" and "fledgling democracies," must "sustain a balance of power that favors freedom." Conceding that "there is weariness, a sense that we have carried these burdens long enough," she warned that the alternative is "chaos."
At the same time, Rice worried that "when the world looks at us today, they see an American government that cannot live within its means." Might that perception have something to do with the American government's unbounded understanding of its role in the world?
So-called defense spending by the U.S. government accounts for one-fifth of the federal budget and more than two-fifths of all military spending, nearly 10 times our country's share of the planet's population. With a national debt the size of the national economy and a federal government that borrows 35 cents of every dollar it spends, we cannot afford to police the world in the way that McCain and Rice demand.
The GOP's presidential candidate seems to share this dangerously broad conception of national defense. Like McCain, Mitt Romney criticizes President Obama for supposedly endangering the country with spending "cuts" that let the Defense Department's budget, which has almost doubled in the last decade, continue to rise, albeit at a slower pace. McCain arbitrarily insists that "core defense spending" should never fall below 4 percent of gross domestic product, no matter what threats the country faces or how much it costs to protect against them.
At last week's convention, Romney promised to maintain "a military that is so strong no nation would ever dare to test it." The U.S. currently spends five times as much on defense as China, its closest competitor. Surely there is room for cuts, even by Romney's standard.
Paul Ryan, whom Romney picked as his running mate largely on the strength of his reputation for fiscal conservatism, told the convention, "We need to stop spending money we don't have." But the Wisconsin congressman also suggested that a Romney administration would defend every democrat and defeat every dictator. "Wherever men and women rise up for their own freedom," he promised, "they will know that the American president is on their side."
Contrary to Romney and Ryan's implication, Democrats are perfectly capable of reckless military interventions that have nothing to do with national defense, as Obama proved with his illegal air war in Libya. The real puzzle is why Republicans think that being quick to risk other people's lives and squander their money is a mark of courageous leadership.
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8 Comments
tod-the tool guy in brooklyn N.Y.
Wednesday, September 5, 2012 at 7:13 AM
Jacob, Rumsfeld's "spearhead" was airforce shock & awe. Take the fight to the ENEMY, and we'll have far less trouble on American soil! (2)Special ops can be dropped out of the sky, behind enemy lines, for "takeout" orders.(3)Military personnel aren't MP's, they are trained to kill. (4) Strike quick, to sever the head of the serpent. No President or Commander-in-chief wishes to be a wartime President, but if war is inevidable, fight to win! 20% of the federal budget goes to Defence, and 44% goes into Entitlements---"something is amiss here, folks!" R & R Solution for U.S.(A)
Pepin the Short in G-Vegas
Wednesday, September 5, 2012 at 7:42 AM
If education in the United States has taught us anything, it's that more spending does not necessarily mean that something is better.
If defense spending is truly your greatest concern, much more can be done by demanding an accounting of that spending than by cutting it. Ask military leaders to give a reason not to cut this or that, and the inefficiencies will be laid bare before your eyes.
India in GA
Wednesday, September 5, 2012 at 9:31 AM
Agreed, Pepin.
Son of Liberty in Colorado
Wednesday, September 5, 2012 at 8:12 AM
Well first we need to understand that since 1941 isolationism is no longer a viable option. Remember the events like the invention of the airplane, aircraft carriers, and Pearl Harbor. Then we had the invention of the rocket (by an American) which later became the ICBM (by German creation) after which we created the Nuclear Bomb. So by virtue of the fact there are no natural barriers behind which we can stay safe, we must maintain a strong military show of force out in the world. Right now that is starting to be a problem as our military has been weakened over the last 4 years, and this coming November will tell if it gets weaker.
I have an idea! We all love our freedoms right?! And we love our country, its history, our heroes, our values ... hard work, love of God, the right to live as we want without a tyrannical government dictating all our thoughts, words, etc. We all want for our children to live in a better world than we have, yes? So why don't we get back to the Founding Values of Natural Rights, and less government, less welfare and nanny state programs. Lets wean ourselves off the government tit, and become a strong and vibrant nation once more with a military thats strong enough that other nations won't want to f**k with us. Lets have a Leader, and I mean a real leader who won't bow to foreign rulers but meet them on equal terms. Lets embrace our American exceptionalism realizing that we MUST be out in the world guarding it against aggression by those who would take it away. We, that is you and I, we own this country. We own this government and they work for us under our law called "The Constitution". Its time they understand that beyond any question. Especially the party that now thinks we belong to the government.
India in GA
Wednesday, September 5, 2012 at 9:44 AM
"So by virtue of the fact there are no natural barriers behind which we can stay safe, we must maintain a strong military show of force out in the world."
Absolutely agreed. I would add that our military is only one of our many strengths that protect us. I think our faith, our economy, and even the American mindset have also kept us strong in the world. Unfortunately, much of that has been eroding for some time.
Tex Horn in Texas
Wednesday, September 5, 2012 at 11:35 AM
I contend that we do have a military strong enough that nobody would want to f*ck with us. The issue is, we don't use it the way we should. When we are threatened, we necessarily should unleash such power on the adversary that the whole world would wince. This is what our enemies understand but we do not. Instead, we spend billions and billions trying to convert desert people into "democratic" citizens. They don't want us there, but we want to be their caretakers. I say when we are attacked, "shock and awe" should just be the beginning.
wjm in Colorado
Wednesday, September 5, 2012 at 1:28 PM
Islam has declared war on America, and the Democrats appologize for our might. Bless all weapons with swine blood, and send any jihadis to Hell if they harm even one person. The cowards would leave us alone, Black Jack Pershing proved that in the Phillipines. Swift complete justice in rebuttal for any attack on any American anywhere, close all mosques and outlaw Islam, the most vile anti-American human cancer on the planet, here in the States. There can be no compromise with treason or terror.
JAC in Texas
Wednesday, September 5, 2012 at 2:05 PM
As the story goes, no one ever challenged Jack Dempsey to a bar fight!