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It’s a group that has elevated wishful thinking to a policy. They generally believe that Saddam could have been contained; offer no coherent strategy for dealing with terrorism; maintain an almost mystical belief in the value of negotiations with tyrannies; favor the power of positive propaganda and “engagement”; and, are overly enthusiastic about disarmament, and international institutions and agreements.

Obama’s team tends to downplay the threat of Islamofascism, while overemphasizing the compromises on civil liberties that has come with war. They believe the Iraq War is a failure and are ready to scuttle away without regard for the future in the Arab Middle East. And they are distinctly chilly toward Israel, urging more concessions from the Jewish state and failing to see the true nature of her– and our– adversaries.

Obama’s advisers are prone to the superficial “solutions” offered by Jimmy Carter, either in the name of “realism” or naïve idealism. With a lack of intellectual and moral clarity about global threats and how the U.S. must respond, they are unable or unwilling to play the crucial deeper game. Their theories are largely untested, and too many of their failures– often the genesis of today’s challenges– have been obscured by a sympathetic press.

Obama needs to be judged by the company he keeps, whether it’s Pastor Jeremiah Wright, American terrorist Bill Ayres, or the flakes and failures among his national security policy advisers with disturbing track records who shelter behind his bright and shiny position papers, website and speeches.

Winston Churchill once said that the Americans always do the right thing– after they try every other alternative. In the days when Churchill was Britain’s Prime Minister, there was enough of a margin for error so that we almost always had another chance. But with 24 hour news cycles, a culture of opposition to authority and tradition in the West, and weapons of mass destruction in the hands of terrorists or apocalyptic fanatics, Obama and his advisors may not have that precious gift of more than one chance to get it right.

Right now, they look set to test Churchill’s proposition. Let’s hope they don’t test it to destruction.

Originally published in Human Events.

Douglas Stone is a Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Policy. He has a background in American and British 20th century political history, as well as Middle Eastern affairs.

 

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