http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=39996

 

Backtrack

by Oliver North
<http://www.humanevents.com/search.php?author_name=Oliver+North> 

11/16/2010 

 

SAN ANTONIO -- The world's most famous teleprompter reader has lost his
audience. For two years, President Barack Obama had the American electorate
and world leaders eating out of the palm of his hand. At virtually every
U.S. and overseas venue, he was welcomed by huge cheering throngs. His
oratory was described as "magnetic," "eloquent" and "spellbinding." Just
nine months into his term, his "accomplishments" were deemed worthy of a
Nobel Prize. Not anymore.
    
After being chastened by the voters in one of the greatest electoral
reversals in American history, the president flew away on the most expensive
foreign junket ever taken by an American head of state. But his appearances
this week in India, Indonesia and South Korea have made it vividly clear to
all that Obama is incapable of shaping events.
    
Though he still panders to every audience, his obsequious bows to foreign
potentates and apologies for America's misdeeds no longer hold the allure
and cachet they carried just months ago. In New Delhi, he reiterated his
Utopian plea for a world without nuclear weapons and spoke of supporting
India's bid for a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council -- without
mentioning that both India and Pakistan hide their atomic arsenals from U.N.
arms inspectors.

He paid homage to Gandhi, danced with schoolchildren in Indonesia and went
to the G-20 summit in Seoul, where he continued to whine about trade
imbalances and currency manipulation while defending further devaluation of
the American dollar. Along the way, he missed yet another opportunity to
define our enemy as radical Islam and ignored American troops in harm's way
by treating Iraq and Afghanistan like flyover country.
    
The president's rhetorical flourishes and quests for applause lines on this
trip provide striking examples of his chaotic, uncertain leadership at home
and abroad. While he was reiterating his campaign pledge to bring all
American troops home from Iraq, his defense secretary, Robert Gates, was
suggesting the newly formed Iraqi government may want U.S. troops to stay
beyond the 2011 deadline for withdrawal.
    
But on Afghanistan, Obama may have begun to backtrack. This week, he said:
"While I have made it clear that American forces will begin the transition
to Afghan responsibility next summer, I've also made it clear that America's
commitment to the Afghan people will endure. The United States will not
abandon the people of Afghanistan -- or the region -- to violent extremists
who threaten us all."
    
He says he has "made it clear," but he hasn't. Ever since he announced the
"surge" in Afghanistan a year ago, he has been talking about commencing the
withdrawal of U.S. troops next July. Now he says we will "begin the
transition to Afghan responsibility next summer." Does that mean we're going
to stay long enough to finish the job -- to actually win in Afghanistan? No
one seems to know.
    
While Obama was enjoying state dinners across Asia, Sens. John McCain, Joe
Lieberman, Lindsey Graham and Kirsten Gillibrand were in Afghanistan for a
firsthand look at what's happening on the ground. After meetings in Kabul
with Gen. David Petraeus and Afghan President Hamid Karzai, McCain told
reporters: "It was wrong to set the date of July" for withdrawing U.S.
troops. "It sent out the wrong message, and it created a problem."
    
The former prisoner of war is right -- but he understates the case. The
original Obama promise to start bringing American troops home from the
shadows of the Hindu Kush -- a pledge made to placate the anti-military base
of his party -- created a whole host of new problems. It told the Taliban
they can wait us out. It told the Iranians and elements in Pakistan to
increase efforts to control the outcome. It told our allies to start packing
their bags for home. And it told Karzai and every corrupt government
official in Afghanistan to steal as much as they can while the gringos still
are writing checks.
    
Perhaps worst of all, Obama's "withdrawal promise" told the American people
we aren't there to win -- that the sacrifice of their sons and daughters was
futile. That's not how Christine and Terry -- the parents of Marine Lance
Cpl. Terry E. Honeycutt Jr. of Waldorf, Md. -- feel, nor should they. Their
son died Oct. 27 after being wounded by an improvised explosive device in
Helmand province. Anti-military protesters intended to disrupt their son's
funeral, until the Patriot Guard Riders were alerted to the protesters'
plan. Instead of having to endure a disgusting graveside demonstration,
scores of God-fearing veterans will honor a fallen Marine and his grieving
family.
    
Obama owes all who are fighting this war -- especially Gold Star families
like the Honeycutts -- a clear and unambiguous declaration that we are in
Afghanistan to win. The time for equivocation has long since passed. In the
case of his "withdrawal date," he must do some serious backtracking.

 



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