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Evelyn Leopold

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GOP Foreign Policy -- When the Earth Was Flat

Posted: 01/16/12 06:01 PM ET

This season's crop of Republican candidates scare me. They appear to be rushing headlong into the 1950s with a Cold War foreign policy and a notion of science that embraces any fossil fuel on the horizon. Most are more belligerent than many of their predecessors and openly toy with an attack against Iran -- and anyone else who gets in our way.

While a Republican candidate or even a Republican president may moderate such views, the national conversation before the election is dangerous at home and abroad and may force Congress to put down more shoot-from-the-hip foreign policy markers. It would be unwise to dismiss them as buffoons.

Alarming is the earth-is-flat crowd that includes every candidate, now that Jon Huntsman has dropped out of the race. Climate change and the necessity of a global shift to a low-carbon economy are NOT in dispute among reputable scientists. (Hopefully a challenge to evolution will not rear its head now that Michele Bachmann is out of the race although Rick Santorum believes in intelligent design and Ron Paul and Rick Perry call it a "theory" out there somewhere.)

The question is what we have to do to ameliorate extreme weather changes and the answers are tough. What kind of pseudo-science are we Americans -- among the top polluters of the planet -- inflicting on our children? (This is not to justify half-hearted steps by the Obama administration but at least these guys understand the science.)

Romney, the frontrunner, and former House speaker Newt Gingrich, have flipped on the issue and now talk about drilling more fossil fuels even as the science on global warming and weather disasters grow stronger. "My view is that we don't know what's causing climate change on this planet," said Romney recently.

But 450 global investors, among them the Bank of America chairman, Charles Holliday, have a different narrative; investments are or should be shifting to energy renewables and energy efficiency, rather than mired in a rust belt of fossil fuels.

Iran
Nearly all the candidates endorse the use of military force against Iran and seem to rely on retreads of the Dick Cheney-Donald Rumsfeld school of fire, brimstone, treason and appeasement, to people in this country sick of warfare. Only Jon Huntsman, now out of the race, has a nuanced grasp of the issues (like the international economy) while Ron Paul is getting a lot of grass roots support for a withdrawal of U.S. military adventures but stands little chance of getting the nomination.

"If we reelect Barack Obama, Iran will have a nuclear weapon," Romney said. Obama has already pushed sanctions on Iran to the brink but obviously cannot talk about military intervention. (All US governments have such plans in reserve). The administration had wanted to talk to Iran but spent a total of 45 minutes in conversation. Assassinating Iranian scientists (the US? Israel?) will not stop any nuclear development, should the Iranians be serious about a bomb.

Most world leaders want Obama to try diplomacy again although the election campaign will make that difficult. The dangers in Iran should not be underestimated but brinkmanship may not solve the problem, should anyone even know how to hit underground nuclear facilities without some serious "collateral damage" that has already hurt us in Afghanistan and Pakistan. (See Anne Penketh)

Israel
No doubt the Israeli government led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would like to see some military action against Iran, a constant source of debate within Israel. That Israel should be protected is a given. But the newspaper Haaretz asked, tongue-in-cheek:

"If the Americans are so fearful of "a second Holocaust," and feel that they have exhausted the diplomatic option, will they kindly go into action against Iran themselves? If Obama is opposed to a military solution, then he must stop the duo of Netanyahu and [Defense Minister Ehud] Barak, before it is too late."

Netanyahu, himself, has thrown in his lot with the Republicans, addressing Congress and making no secret of his aversion to Obama . By now it is obvious that Netanyahu, with settlers and right wingers a key part of his coalition, does not have any serious plans for a peace process or instituting a moratorium on settlements. And the Palestinians are not happy about talking to anyone, despite the latest peace talks. Without the United States or the Europeans as intermediaries, peace negotiations will go nowhere.

European Socialist?
My favorite accusation is that Obama is a European socialist (at least that is a step up from the birther lie that went viral on the Internet). Why are Romney and his colleagues suddenly trouncing our allies? Are there any European conservatives now running Germany, France and Britain who admire our health care system?

So while we are knocking Europeans, here is a leading conservative voice from Britain, usually a staunch supporter of our Republican Party. The Economist magazine wrote in exasperation:

"Nowadays, a candidate must believe not just some but all of the following things: that abortion should be illegal in all cases; that gay marriage must be banned even in states that want it; that the 12 million illegal immigrants, even those who have lived in America for decades, must all be sent home; that the 46 million people who lack health insurance have only themselves to blame; that global warming is a conspiracy; that any form of gun control is unconstitutional; that any form of tax increase must be vetoed, even if the increase is only the cancelling of an expensive and market-distorting perk; that Israel can do no wrong and the "so-called Palestinians", to use Mr. Gingrich's term, can do no right; that the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Education and others whose names you do not have to remember should be abolished."

Hopefully, in the overseas affairs arena, Republic foreign policy is not an oxymoron.

 

Follow Evelyn Leopold on Twitter: www.twitter.com/evjournalist

This season's crop of Republican candidates scare me. They appear to be rushing headlong into the 1950s with a Cold War foreign policy and a notion of science that embraces any fossil fuel on the hori...
This season's crop of Republican candidates scare me. They appear to be rushing headlong into the 1950s with a Cold War foreign policy and a notion of science that embraces any fossil fuel on the hori...
 
 
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eaarth2
“An era ends when its illusions are exhausted
05:43 AM on 01/18/2012
The climate is warming rapidly- even Conservative columnist Michael Gerson over at the Washington Post says so in a OP Piece yesterday. We are in deep trouble with the climate now with C02 at these levels- does the GOP Flat Earth Society intend to dig us into a deeper hole?
Chinawanderer
A biography should never be micro
11:17 AM on 01/18/2012
Yes.
10:59 PM on 01/17/2012
What more can be said? The 'Economist' summed it all up.
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StephenBP
What's he building in there?
09:33 PM on 01/17/2012
I think that the young, the disenfranchised, the non-whites, the realists, the dreamers, and the thinkers will not buy the BS that the whole conservative clown clan is dishing out. Hopefully, the conservative fossil feudalists won’t steal the next election like they stole two of the last three.
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Lvm
04:59 PM on 01/17/2012
Many of these candidates are from the Vietnam era. After all the young lives lost, after the invasion of Iraq where thousands died for nothing, but an ideological theory, after a bogged down Afghanistan conflict costing lives........Mitt Romney flexes his muscles, and talks military action with Iran a twinkle in his eye. It's should make us all sad and ashamed that this rhetoric is met with applause in our country.
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lambdin1
What's this?
02:21 PM on 01/17/2012
1950's!!! I think you are giving the GOP/TP to much credit. Its more like the dark ages! Not to worry though the hackneyed, trite twaddle that they espouse will die out. It is a generational thing and the GOP/TP only attracts the old.
01:52 PM on 01/17/2012
This what scares me about the Republicans this year too. People forget that we don't elect a king in this country, though all the candidates speak like it. A president cannot create jobs out of thin air. A president cannot lower taxes. A president cannot make abortion illegal or make gay marriage unconstitutional. They just don't have that power.

But they CAN get us into a pointless war, and have done so repeatedly. It's war, not just domestic spending that is exploding the deficit. People are tired of war.
01:03 PM on 01/17/2012
Whats really scary is a significant bunch of Americans believe this nonsense is the way to engage with the world.
GHarry
Kitty wrangler
12:38 PM on 01/17/2012
The Republican Party's collective IQ has dropped about 50 points since William F. Buckley and Dwight Eisenhower were America's conservative leaders. The party's deliberate promotion of ignorance and misinformation is really appalling. Also, most Americans don't seem to realize that the Republican Party is essentially a religious party now that is motivated mainly by religious goals and agendas. Their positions on economic matters are almost an afterthought compared to the zeal with which they approach social issues like abortion, gay rights and, oddly, immigration. The GOP's "foreign policy" is actually just a thinly veiled program aimed at serving Israel and waging the thousand-year-old Christian battle against Islam. It's strange and disturbing to see a major American political party melting down like this and transforming itself into a theocratic fringe group.
12:43 PM on 01/17/2012
You have missed most of what has been going on for the last four years. The Republican party is primarily focused on excessive spending, excessive taxation and excessive government regulation. The evangelicals are a minor part of the party, witness the fact that Santorum isn't really going very far.
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MarcEdward
likes all cats more than most people
02:23 PM on 01/17/2012
Oh please, these same Republicans didn't give a hoot about spending under President Bush, it's just like when Clinton was elected - as soon as the President is a Democrat, they get upset about spending, so save the whole "concerned about spending".
Excessive taxation? Seriously? And when have taxes been lower?
Well? They are lower under Obama than Bush, so that's a failed argument as well.
Regulation - be specific - what regulation? You mean regulation that gives us safe food and drugs? Or stop signs and traffic signals?
Your entire post is just meaningless talking points based on nothing.
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02:57 PM on 01/17/2012
The evangelicals may be a minor part of the party, but they sure have a huge influence. And though Santorum isn't going very far, the religious right's agenda has seeped into the Republican agenda. What I see happening as far as the financial issues in this party is a longing for the days before the Depression(aka the time when the Earth was Flat). As far as excessive spending, Bush is one of those Republicans who brough on excessive spending-for war. And why we're in the current predicament now. It astounds me how people want problems taken care of so quick when it took 8 years(also known as the Bush era) to get up into this mess.
11:18 AM on 01/17/2012
The problem is, is that Reagan built the current coalition that the Republican party has been trying to hold together since he left. It is fracturing more and more as time goes on, as each wrestles for control.

But, the Democrat coalition(that Obama revitalized) is withering away as his failed policies and empty promises come to light.

The left should be just as upset with Obama as the right should be with say....Romney.

It is time for a real rebirth of ideas in the political spectrum, on both sides. Otherwise, we will continue down the same path we have been going on for the past 40 years. A path to bankruptcy and destruction.
11:08 AM on 01/17/2012
It appears to most of us that politicians of both parties are putting in policies that are stupid and against the interests of the mass population. However, in reality, they are fact doing their job very, very well.

The problem is that they no longer work for the interests of the people. They represent the interests of small rich groups who finance their campaigns. From that point of view, they have made their employers and themselves extremely rich (the 1%).

They do this because of two reasons.

One, the media is no longer in the business of challenging politicians. Media companies are now some of the most profitable companies in the country and are too invested in the current political system to rock the boat.

Two, most people put very little time and effort to follow the issues properly. The seem to prefer the "show elections" going on now in the GOP primaries.
10:55 AM on 01/17/2012
"...Republican candidates scare me. They appear to be rushing headlong into the 1950s with a Cold War foreign policy..."

If only! The foreign policy during the 1950's and much of the Cold War, was at least based on a serious effort to assess threats and muster a proportional response. During the 1950's the US faced the Soviet Union, the largest country in the world, by ideology openly hostile, with an enormous, battle-hardened army, plus a navy and air force with nuclear weapons and full global reach.

The Cold War years was the only time the US has faced an existential threat. In comparison the enemies of today are, for lack of a better word, piss-ants.

In contrast with any recent American president, Eisenhower did not want people to be alarmed. He did not want the US to become a "garrison state". And so the most dangerous years ever for the US are forever remembered as a really great time to be an American. Not bad for GOP foreign policy in extremely difficult times, and it makes the current saber-rattling look even more embarrassing.
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cajundave
10:51 AM on 01/17/2012
The Republicans have managed to paint Democrats as those who want to give what workers earn to those who won't work. This attitude works with poorer, less educated voters. It also works in the South (where I'm from) where there are racial. While there are those who live on welfare and have spotty work records, they represent a small minority, when taking the population as a whole. These same people have no problem handing billions to oil companies, whose executives wouldn't give them the time of day.
How can the Republicans continue to defend "supply side" economics? Why would companies create jobs if there is no demand for their products. Our economy works from the bottom up. Rather than give oil companies billions on top of the billions they earn, why not give this money to consumers, who will purchase goods & services? Jobs are not an entedy unto themselves. Jobs exist as a result of depand and the need to produce more product or service to meet the demand. Everyone benefits when we approach the economy in this manner.
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sagmann
Dies Irae
10:37 AM on 01/17/2012
"Hopefully a challenge to evolution will not rear its head..."

Are you kidding? It's ALREADY here, every day, everywhere, starting with the permanent attacks on Public School.
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sagmann
Dies Irae
10:24 AM on 01/17/2012
"When" the Earth was flat? But for them, the Earth IS flat...
CactusTom
My New Novel
09:54 AM on 01/17/2012
Had TODAY's Republican party been in power following the American Civil War up until modern times, Jim Crow would still be flourishing in the South, women still would not have the vote, gays would be facing jail time and there would be no social security or Medicare. In other words every avenue of social improvement would have been crushed. And Republicans continue their backward ways undiminished.
11:43 AM on 01/17/2012
Lincoln was a republican. The dems are the party of the southern KKK. They still have a few old members in the dem. party.
02:28 PM on 01/17/2012
In the 19th century the Republican party was the more progressive of the two. That flipped in the 20th century. Lincoln would not endorse today's Republicans.
CactusTom
My New Novel
10:56 AM on 01/18/2012
Yes, the Republican Party was the party of Lincoln, but in those day's the "Radical Republicans who lead the party were radical leftists. When Kennedy and Johnson backed civil right all those nasty Dixiecrats moved from the Democratic side to the Republican side, ending up as the Tea Party.
12:39 PM on 01/17/2012
Today's Republican party does not pay attention to racial differences. It is the Democrats who only see the black voter as a monolithic bloc. And treat them as such.
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healthanalyst
Banned from commenting, so?
06:46 PM on 01/17/2012
Except for illegal immigration which they see as Mexican. When its not always.