Will the GOP Kick It Away?

Will the GOP Kick It Away?

Guest Post by Patrick J. Buchanan

With Hillary Clinton scrambling to explain her missing emails, much of America is wailing, “Please don’t make us watch this movie again!”

Why, then, would the Republican Party, with a chance to sweep it all in 2016, want to return us to the nightmare days of George W., which caused America to rise up and throw the party out in 2006 and 2008?

Do Republicans really believe that America wants a return to the Cold War with Moscow and new and larger hot wars in the Middle East?

With President Barack Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry seemingly about to conclude a deal to freeze Iran’s nuclear program, House Speaker John Boehner invited Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu to use the State of the Union podium to call Obama and Kerry naive and trash their deal as paving the ayatollah’s way to an atomic bomb.

For the U.S. House to invite a foreign leader to come into its chambers and see that leader, on national television, mocking U.S. foreign policy to wild cheering was something few of us expected to see in our lifetimes.

Came then the astonishing letter drafted by Tom Cotton, a 2-month-old senator who makes Ted Cruz look like Ramsey Clark, that was signed by 47 Republicans. Sent to the ayatollah and mullahs, the Cotton letter instructed Iran that any deal signed by Kerry might not be worth the paper it was written on.

Congress could reject the deal, said the 47, and a new president in 2017 could cancel it with “the stroke of a pen.”

The letter’s purpose was the same as Bibi’s purpose — to scuttle, sabotage and sink any U.S. nuclear deal with Iran. But if there is no deal and Iran returns to enriching uranium to 20 percent, we are on the road to war.

Is this what America has to look forward to if it votes GOP?

Another Middle Eastern war, with a country twice the size of Iraq, to strip the country of weapons of mass destruction it does not have?

Didn’t we just do that at a cost of 4,500 dead, 35,000 wounded warriors and $1.7 trillion?

GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham, mulling a presidential run, has called Kerry “delusional” and charged Obama with timidity. Why? Because, said Lindsey, “he didn’t call Putin the thug that he is.”

Is this what America wants, a president who will call the ruler of Russia, who has thousands of nuclear weapons and is supported by 85 percent of its people, a “thug”? Is that presidential leadership?

How does name-calling at that level advance U.S. interests?

At the Munich security conference in February, Sen. John McCain compared the negotiations in Minsk, Belarus, among German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and Vladimir Putin to what happened in Munich in 1938.

Yet the Minsk truce is holding. Ukrainians are not dying, as of today. And the Germans are meeting to bail out Ukraine and prevent that bankrupt country from going belly up.

Yet last week, McCain said German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier belongs “in the Neville Chamberlain school of diplomacy.”

Said McCain, this “is the same guy that refuses — and his government — to enact any restrictions on the behavior of Vladimir Putin, who is slaughtering Ukrainians as we speak. He has no credibility.”

A former presidential nominee, McCain is chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Does he speak for the party?

Will America applaud an arms airlift to prod a destitute Ukraine into fighting Russia to reimpose Kiev’s rule over the Russian-speaking Donetsk, Luhansk and Crimea, in a war Ukrainians cannot win and NATO Europe will not fight?

If Putin should respond to U.S. weapons pouring into Ukraine by seizing Mariupol on the Sea of Azov and establishing a land bridge from Russia to Crimea, what would the Republicans do?

Yet undeniably, inside the GOP, the day of the hawk is again at hand. Sen. Cotton, whose tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan give him a street cred that other GOP hawks do not have, is making no apologies, not backing down, driving the debate and being emulated by the GOP presidential hopefuls. Sen. Rand Paul signed his letter, as did Sens. Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio.

And the Republicans are betting, probably correctly, that the invitation to Bibi to dis Obama and elevate the menace of Iran will sit well with a Jewish community that historically votes Democratic.

But short-term gains could be canceled out by long-term losses.

If Kerry comes home with a deal to which Germany, Britain, France, Russia, China and the U.N. Security Council have signed on, will Congress spend two years trying to scuttle it? Will Congress refuse to lift sanctions on Iran even if all our principal allies have done so?

In addition to bellicosity, the GOP seems to suffer from inconsistency. Even as it seeks to strip Obama of his power to close a deal with Iran, it is trying to give him a blank check to fight ISIS.

And who is fighting the Islamic State today in Tikrit, Iraq?

The Shiite militia and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
7 Comments
flash
flash
March 17, 2015 8:39 am

GOPES!

“I think the neocons are the equivalent of the neo-Keynesians. The neo-Keynesians bankrupted the world financially with their policies and the neocons destroyed the Middle East with their policies. Basically, they destabilized the whole Middle East.

But the problem is not so much the policy of destabilizing; the problem is the human tragedy, that people that were mostly poor have been displaced and are even poorer today than before. That, nobody talks about. They just talk about ISIS in Syria and Iraq. They talk about insurgency here and there, but they never talk about the human tragedy, and that I would like to point out to people. The interventions by the neocons, or under Obama under the influence of the neocons, have been a complete human tragedy.

But the Americans sit there and say, “America is exceptional.” American exceptionalism. Human rights should be pursued by everyone else in the world but not by the US.”

Marc Farber

Democracy Is Increasingly Dysfunctional

Stucky
Stucky
March 17, 2015 9:08 am

“Came then the astonishing letter drafted by Tom Cotton, a 2-month-old senator …” –article

Wow. Two months old. I thought the minimum age to be in Congress was 21.

To be honest, I never heard of Cotton before this. Why does So Much Shit come from Arkansas?? This fuknut repuke is downright scary.

“Tom Cotton is the Worst Bully in the Senate – Here Are 10 Reasons Why” —- here

http://www.commondreams.org/views/2015/03/12/tom-cotton-worst-bully-senate-here-are-10-reasons-why

TC
TC
March 17, 2015 9:15 am

“I hate conservatives, but I really fucking hate liberals.” Matt Stone

I don’t hate conservatives, I just wish the people who *claim* to be conservative and lovers of the Constitution and yet can’t wait to stick their red white and blue dick into anything that walks in the middle east would just fucking admit that they really aren’t conservatives after all.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
March 17, 2015 9:25 am

Agree 100% with Buchanan (as usual). The only things that can be said in defense of Cotton’s letter are 1) it was a simple statement of fact, 2) it could incent Iran to comply stringently with terms of whatever Obama and Kerry’s deal is, and 3) there’s a slight chance that Iran would agree to a tighter deal in order to mollify the 47. A little saber-rattling is to be expected in order to win the GOP nomination. That’s fine as long as they don’t really mean it. The race is between Bush and Walker anyway. None of the rest of them matter.

TE
TE
March 17, 2015 11:22 am

I’m sure Iran realizes that these 47 “respected” politicians also “promised” to do something about illegals and O’care and that they have produced nothing but the sound of crickets.

Tc Says, “I don’t hate conservatives, I just wish the people who *claim* to be conservative and lovers of the Constitution and yet can’t wait to stick their red white and blue dick into anything that walks in the middle east would just fucking admit that they really aren’t conservatives after all….”

The odds of this are the exact same as those that order murder, life destruction and death to admit they are not Christian.

Hypocrisy and delusion seem to be the one common theme that connects ancient organized society, politics and religion.

I hate them all. Every one that has benefited one second, of one day, on senseless death and continued destruction of all but themselves.

We continue to pretend they care for “us” while all they do is grow and entrench “them,” while killing off a whole bunch of useless breathes somewhere. We are next.

flash
flash
March 17, 2015 1:00 pm

[imgcomment image?oh=f9e904834e00983c4d2bb06418798e24&oe=55B1C2D0[/img]

[imgcomment image[/img]

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
March 18, 2015 8:20 pm

Cheney must love this Cotton guy like the son he never had.
Regarding who to like neo-cons to, how ’bout Nazi’s? Must be, because that’s what they’re supporting in the Ukraine.