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Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Dick Morris and  Eileen McGann :: Townhall.com Columnist
Obama's Backbone Deficit
by Dick Morris and Eileen McGann
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Last week raised important questions about whether Barack Obama is strong enough to be president. On the domestic political front, he showed incredible weakness in dealing with the Clintons, while on foreign and defense questions, he betrayed a lack of strength and resolve in standing up to Russia's invasion of Georgia.

This two-dimensional portrait of weakness underscores fears that Obama might, indeed, be a latter-day Jimmy Carter.

Consider first the domestic and political. Bill and Hillary Clinton have no leverage over Obama. Hillary can't win the nomination. She doesn't control any committees. If she or her supporters tried to disrupt the convention or demonstrate outside, she would pay a huge price among the party faithful. If Obama lost - after Hillary made a fuss at the convention - they would blame her for all eternity (just like Democrats blame Ted Kennedy for Carter's defeat).

But, without having any leverage or a decent hand to play, the Clintons bluffed Obama into amazing concessions. Hillary will speak on Tuesday night in prime time. Chelsea will introduce her. She will get to play a film extolling her virtues produced by Harry Bloodworth Thomason. Bill will speak on Wednesday night. Hillary's name will be placed into nomination. She will get to have nominating and seconding speeches on her behalf. And, on Thursday night, the last night of the convention, the roll call will show how narrowly Obama prevailed.

So Obama gave away Tuesday night, Wednesday night and part of Thursday night to the Clintons. It will really be their convention. A stronger candidate would've called their bluff and confined the Clintons to one night on which both Hillary and Bill spoke (he would have outshone her). He would have blocked a roll call by allowing a voice vote to nominate by acclimation. He would have stood up to the Clintons and recaptured his own convention.

If Obama can't stand up to the Clintons, after they have been defeated, how can he measure up to a resurgent Putin who has just achieved a military victory? When the Georgia invasion first began, Obama appealed for "restraint" on both sides. He treated the aggressive lion and the victimized lamb even-handedly. His performance was reminiscent of the worst of appeasement at Munich, where another dictator got away with seizing another breakaway province of another small neighboring country, leading to World War II.

After two days, Obama corrected himself, spoke of Russian aggression and condemned it. But his initial willingness to see things from the other point of view and to buy the line that Georgia provoked the invasion by occupying a part of its own country betrayed a world view characterized by undue deference to aggressors.

We know so little about Obama. His experience is so thin that it's hard to tell what kind of a president he'd be. While he nominally has been in the Senate for four years, he really only served the first two and consumed the rest of his tenure running for president and disregarding his Senate duties.

So we have no choice but to scrutinize his current transactions and statements for some clue as to who he is and what he'd do. In that context, his reaction to the first real-time foreign-policy crisis he faced as a nominee leaves his strength in doubt. So does his palsied response to the Clintons' attempt to make Denver a Clinton convention.

Is Obama an over-intellectualizing Hamlet who is incapable of decisive, strong action? With Iran on the verge of acquiring nuclear weapons and Russia resurgent, there isn't much room for on-the-job learning.

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About The Author
Dick Morris, a former political adviser to Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) and President Bill Clinton, is the author of Condi vs. Hillary: The Next Great Presidential Race. To get all of Dick Morris’s and Eileen McGann’s columns for free by email, go to www.dickmorris.com
 
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RE PRES. BUSH'S CRITICS
MYOPINE (8/20 7:33 pm post), writes, "Liberals keep parroting stale irrelevant lies about Bush."

Liberals aren't the only ones who've criticized Pres. Bush, i.e.: :

RE 9/11, Conservative Fox News Analyst James Pinkerton, who worked in the White House under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, in Pinkerton's April 9, 2004 column in Newsday wrote: "President George W. Bush got a blunt warning five weeks before Sept. 11 and he did little or nothing." ..

Re Katrina, Town Hall columnist and National Review Editor Rich Lowry, moved by the lack of immediate federal aid during the Hurricane Katrina disaster, in September 2005, wrote: "A vigorous blame game is still the only way to keep government failures from being conveniently ignored."

Re the Iraq War, in October 2007 Lowry wrote: ""The U.S. government has never brought to bear its resources in a truly national effort to win (the Iraq War)." (A war which Pres. Bush has repeatedly said was so important to our national security and survival.)

Town Hall columnist Dinesh D'Souza last December compared Pres. Bush to "a toy solder who walks into a wall and keeps going." Also, D'Souza has criticized the President for surrounding himself with "cronies and sycophants."

Last March, Town Hall columnist Cliff May wrote that "One can say the invasion of Iraq was unwise: Before committing troops to battle, a president should have a realistic understanding of what can be achieved, in what time frame, and at what cost. One can say the occupation of Iraq was bungled." May also wrote "The result of so many errors and misjudgments was catastrophic."

The late Town Hall columnist and Conservative leader William F. Buckley, Jr. as long as two and a half years ago called the Iraq War "Pres. Bush's failure."

Brilliant Much?!
One of the most insightful criticisms I've ever heard - Prager thought it so important, he read the whole article on his program. Great work....
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