Posted on 06/26/2010 10:33:04 AM PDT by Sub-Driver
Barack Obama's firing of Stanley McChrystal showed weakness and will backfire
He may have been hailed for his decisiveness, but Barack Obama sacked the wrong man and has yet to sort out his Afghanistan policy, writes Toby Harnden in Washington
Published: 4:37PM BST 26 Jun 2010
For the Washington cognoscenti, the appointment of General David Petraeus marked the crescendo of President Barack Obama's Wonderful Week. In firing General Stanley McChrystal, Obama, the ultimate cool cat, was transformed into Mr Angry. The law professor finally became commander-in-chief.
Obama, so the Beltway groupthink goes, turned a lose-lose situation into a political victory by asserting his authority over an insubordinate steely-eyed killer and replacing him with the ultimate warrior-scholar. He showed the doubters he was tough, and he traded up.
How wrong the conventional wisdom can be. Obama's actions in dragging McChrystal back to Washington and personally sacking him in as dramatic a fashion as possible in fact displayed weakness. They also avoided the real problem - his confused Afghanistan policy and dysfunctional civilian team.
(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...
Thank you!
with the loosening of the ROEs, our guys win......they have a better chance to come home alive.
My pleasure
Thank you...
I think you've got the right idea, but the wrong event. The entire nation pulled together in the days after 9/11, and GWB acquired their support with the speech he gave about a week after 9/11. Recall the comment that followed by Pat Buchanan: "Tonight, George Bush became President".
"These terrorists kill not merely to end lives, but to disrupt and end a way of life. With every atrocity, they hope that America grows fearful, retreating from the world and forsaking our friends. They stand against us, because we stand in their way."
"We are not deceived by their pretenses to piety. We have seen their kind before. They are the heirs of all the murderous ideologies of the 20th century. By sacrificing human life to serve their radical visions - by abandoning every value except the will to power - they follow in the path of fascism, and Nazism, and totalitarianism. And they will follow that path all the way, to where it ends: in history's unmarked grave of discarded lies."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2001/sep/21/september11.usa13
Ouch is right - good article! Even the foreign press is calling Obama “thin skinned”.
ping
Really?? C'mon now honestly, just tell me what you REALLY think, sounds like you're holding back a while there!!
I think that 65% of clear thinking Americans feel the same way but are a bit hesitant to say it.
Bush’s first comments to the nation on the day of 9-11 were viewed as “shaky,” as if he weren’t quite in command of the situation or how to respond.
The Ground Zero remarks with firefighters were on 9-14.
http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/gwbush911groundzerobullhorn.htm
Bush seem much more in command while also exhibiting the kind of empathy that apparently Americans had come to expect from a president under Bill Clinton. I think the key was this was a largely unscripted moment in which Americans saw their president as both a “man of the people” who understood and really felt the loss of the families affected by 9-11, but also as a tough no-nonsense commander in chief who was resolved to strike back at the perpetrators as opposed to getting the UN to pass a resolution of protest against the attack. People could see he was speaking from the heart—not reading from a canned speech or teleprompter. The crowd reaction said it all.
I concur his subsequent Oval Office speech likewise carried through on this “strong but compassionate” leader theme. But I’m reasonably certain I’m not alone in believing 9/14 was the first day this view of Bush had begun to emerge.
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