Posted on 09/08/2014 4:46:50 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
illustration/The Hill
The politics of terrorism have returned with a vengeance for the midterm elections.
National security dominated the first election cycles after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, with Democrats fearful of being labeled unpatriotic if they criticized then-President George W. Bush.
The Republican advantage eroded years later as public opinion soured against the Iraq War. By the time President Obama sought reelection in 2012, he was able to tout the killing of Osama bin Laden to portray Democrats as the party of strength in foreign policy.
But now, with the 13th anniversary of 9/11 just days away, Obama and the Democrats are back on the defensive.
Obamas response to the advances made by the radicals of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has provoked a chorus of criticism, including from vulnerable Democrats up for reelection this year.
And its not just the broad threat posed by ISIS that has changed the political landscape Obama has given GOP critics an opening by fumbling several public statements.
One gaffe came during a recent press conference when he admitted that, when it comes to countering ISIS, we dont have a strategy yet.
Former spokesman Robert Gibbs called it a wince-able moment.
Senate Democrats who are running for reelection in a tough political environment are sounding the alarm bell.
Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) fired off a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder demanding to know what the Justice Department is doing to intercept American jihadists returning from Syria.
I was troubled by the presidents recent suggestion that the administration has not yet developed a comprehensive strategy to address the growing threat of ISILs activities in Syria, he wrote, using an alternative acronym for ISIS.
Separately, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) pounced on Obamas remarks during a trip to Estonia where he characterized ISIS as a manageable threat.
This is not in my view a manageable situation. They want to kill us, he warned.
It was a rare instance when some Democrats sided with McConnell over the president.
Do not believe ISIL is manageable, agree these terrorists must be chased to the gates of hell, tweeted Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), who is facing a tough reelection race.
Following the criticism, Obama on Friday tried to walk back his comments, saying ISIS must be destroyed and cannot be contained.
He will expand on that idea when he delivers a televised address to the nation on Wednesday. Previewing his message in an interview with Meet the Press Sunday, Obama said that he wanted the American people to understand ISIS is a serious threat but that we have the capacity to deal with it.
Democrats who could replace Obama in the Oval Office, including Vice President Biden and Hillary Clinton, are also using more muscular foreign policy rhetoric. Biden has vowed to follow ISIS to the gates of hell, while Clinton has blamed the growth of ISIS on the failure to help build a credible fighting force against strongman Bashar Assad in Syria.
Republicans who are mulling their own quest for the White House in 2016 are attacking Obamas foreign policy with gusto.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) blasted the president for dithering and debating and always playing catch-up on international crises that threaten U.S. interests.
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) declared we ought to bomb [ISIS] back to the Stone Age.
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), who in the past warned against foreign entanglements and called for ending foreign aid, declared in Time magazine, I am not an isolationist, and faulted Obama for letting a jihadist wonderland blossom in Libya and Syria.
Some Democrats are frustrated by what they see as a lack of clear leadership from the president.
All of these members back in their home states have been getting asked about all of these foreign policy issues for the last couple weeks. Very few if any have gotten any guidance from the White House or indication about what the president is thinking, said a Democratic strategist who has spoken with several lawmakers.
The consequence, the strategist added, is that some endangered Democrats are beginning to flail about a little.
There is a growing belief among policy experts that ISIS poses a greater national security threat than al Qaeda did before 9/11. The radical group is estimated to control billions of dollars in assets, and has trained American and European citizens who could return home to stage an attack.
They have much more resources than al Qaeda did on 9/11. The whole 9/11 operation cost less than half a million dollars. [ISIS] has at least two billion dollars. My understanding is theyre selling oil on the black market for a million dollars a day, said Rep. Pete King (R-N.Y.), the former chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee who might run for president in 2016.
ISIS is right now more dangerous than al Qaeda was on 9/11, he added.
Lee Hamilton, the former Democratic congressman from Indiana and vice chairman of the 9/11 Commission, defended Obama for taking a careful approach. He argued that Obama is smart to feel out allies such as the United Kingdom before rushing in.
[Obama] wants some help and that makes sense to me, he said. You have a lot of strands here. What are we willing to do by ourselves? How serious is this threat? What are our objectives?
But Hamilton said the president could do more to lead an international public relations effort to discredit militant Islamic movements.
One of the things totally missing from the strategy, from my point of view, is a political strategy. If youre going to destroy ISIS, what youre really talking about is destroying an ideology. Ive not seen anything as to how were going to do that, he said.
The mounting political tensions over foreign policy could complicate any effort by Obama to win congressional approval for airstrikes inside Syria before the election.
Some vulnerable Democrats dont want to vote on the issue for fear of depressing the liberal base right before an election in which turnout will be critical.
A Democratic leadership aide said Friday that a Senate vote on a new use-of-force resolution this fall is unlikely, but that could change depending on the mood of the caucus.
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) says House lawmakers will receive briefings on the Islamic militant group this week, but has not indicated whether a vote will occur.
One thing people affiliated with both parties can agree on especially in the wake of the videotaped beheadings of two American journalists is that terrorism is back, in a big way, as a political issue.
Former Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.) said the gruesome deaths had changed the ranking of issues in this country.
I assume, if you did a poll this morning, that dealing with ISIS would be somewhere near the top, he added.
Had you done it six months ago, it probably would not have been on the polls list of questions.
He will expand on that idea when he delivers a televised address to the nation on Wednesday. Previewing his message in an interview with Meet the Press Sunday, Obama said that he wanted the American people to understand ISIS is a serious threat but that we have the capacity to deal with it.
HE MEANS AMERICANS (and our allies) WILL NEED MORE RESTRICTIONS ON OUR FREEDOMS - More pat-downs, more wire taps, more EPA dictates and accusations about returning military being a problem - in other words, more fundamentally changing of America to "deal with it."
More bowing to islam, this man is pure evil. Wants us to be defenseless against ISIS. Sept 11th is coming, they’ll take the guns after some false flag attack.
After watching Barry’s performance on Meet The Press, I now fear we are about to get hit, and hard.
No way these Islamist freaks are going to allow that strutting smack-talking Mission Accomplished moment to pass without a response.
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