The Hill
 
June 3, 2015
 
_Home_ (http://thehill.com/)  | _Opinion_ (http://thehill.com/opinion)  | 
_Katie Pavlich_ (http://thehill.com/opinion/katie-pavlich) 
Katie Pavlich: Obama’s policy of political  correctness

 
 
After observing President Obama over the past six years in the White House, 
 it’s become clear that political correctness is prioritized above the 
safety of  soldiers serving overseas and the dignity of their sacrifices. Sure, 
the  president gives speeches of commemoration — he has to. But a number of 
his  actions expose a disconnect.  
First, we can look to Afghanistan as an example. According to data compiled 
 by CNS News, 75 percent of the casualties in Afghanistan have occurred 
since  2009, when Obama took office. The severe injury rate, meaning lost 
limbs, has  also skyrocketed more than 200 percent. These numbers can be 
attributed directly  to the rules of engagement, which come directly from the 
president.  Split-second, life-or-death decisions on the battlefield were 
bureaucratized for  political reasons, resulting in fatal consequences. Obama 
left 
our troops in  Afghanistan with their hands tied behind their backs and gave 
the advantage to  the enemy. Adding insult to injury, Obama pulled out of 
the war with a  conclusion, not a victory. 
 
After the 2012 terror attack in Benghazi, Libya, Obama stood in front of  
the flag-draped coffins of four dead Americans and lied about a video. Later 
in  an interview with “60 Minutes,” he referred to the terror attack as  “
bumps  in the road.”   
When the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) overran the Iraqi city of  
Ramadi a little over one week ago, the White House classified the loss as a  
“setback,” discounting the American blood given to take the city years 
ago. 
“Are we gonna light our hair on fire every time that there is a setback in  
the campaign against ISIL?” said White House press secretary Josh Earnest, 
who  speaks directly for the president.  
Despite the White House’s dismissal of Ramadi falling to a new enemy, of  
those who fought there, and of their families, remember what it was  worth.  
“The Iraqi army’s defeat in Ramadi last week surely came as gut-wrenching  
news for many of the troops and veterans who fought there during the 
eight-year  Iraq War that officially ended in 2011. Those troops, mostly 
Marines, 
saw some  of the most harrowing combat action in modern American military 
history,” the  Military Times reports. “At least 70 U.S. troops lost their 
lives  during the time dubbed the ‘Battle of Ramadi’ that ran from roughly 
April  through November of 2006. Hundreds of others died in the city and its  
surrounding environs during other periods of the war. In all, more than 
1,000  Americans died in combat in Anbar province, where Ramadi is situated. A 
decade  later, their family members still think of those young men and women 
every day —  even as they struggle to make some kind of sense of the new 
images depicting the  Islamic State’s black flags rippling over Ramadi’s 
rooftops.”  
Keep in mind ISIS has been able to prevail as a result of Obama’s political 
 decision to pull U.S. forces out of Iraq too soon.  
When American hero and Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle, who saved countless  
American lives during deployments in Iraq, was killed in 2013, the president  
failed to issue any kind of acknowledgement of his service and sacrifice. 
When  Kyle’s funeral was held at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas, no representatives 
or  aides from the administration were sent to attend. Obama did, however, 
find  enough aides and officials to send to the funeral of Michael Brown, a 
criminal  whose attack of a police officer resulted in his own demise.  
Obama and the White House never mentioned Kyle at all. Not even a generic  
statement was sent out from the press office. The White House did, however,  
release a statement of condolences when singer Whitney Houston died of a 
drug  overdose in 2012.  
But perhaps Obama’s biggest disrespect of those who have died fighting the  
war on terror came last summer, when he held a Rose Garden ceremony to 
celebrate  the homecoming of alleged deserter Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, who was 
captured by the  Taliban after reportedly walking away from his platoon in 
2009. 
That release  came at the cost of releasing five top Taliban commanders from 
Guantánamo Bay.  The president traded the enemy for a deserter and a 
traitor. Thousands of men  and women died fighting the very kinds of terrorists 
Obama released. Many of the  soldiers who survived that fight no longer have 
all of their limbs, and their  lives have been changed forever. Regardless, 
Obama’s White House maintains  Bergdahl served with “honor and distinction.”  
When Bergdahl’s platoon mates hit the media circuit to expose him as a  
traitor, the administration, the White House and allies of the president  
publicly dismissed them as liars and kooks.  
Karen Vaughn, mother of fallen Navy SEAL Aaron Vaughn, summed up the 
Bergdahl  swap nicely during a Concerned Veterans for America event over the 
weekend.  “Aaron Vaughn did not die so the commander in chief could trade five 
enemies for  a traitor,” she said.  
Indeed. 

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