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Friday, April 17, 2009
Suzanne Fields :: Townhall.com Columnist
Calling Shots Requires Precision
by Suzanne Fields
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Surely, the creepiest words in the contemporary vernacular, whether describing the behavior of a country or the behavior of a common criminal, are "appropriate" and "inappropriate." A child who eats peas on a knife displays "inappropriate" behavior; a child who uses a knife to cut another child is also guilty of "inappropriate" behavior. Crime is thus reduced to bad manners.

A tough military response to piracy is "appropriate," whether by Thomas Jefferson against the pirates of the Barbary Coast or Barack Obama against the pirates of the Somali coast. These were no rollicking band of brigands, no "Pirates of Penzance." Nevertheless, Barack Obama surely was tempted to delay, if not equivocate, whether by drawing up a list of talking points or suggesting an international forum of "partners" to debate solutions. We all can be glad he fought back like John Wayne and not Jimmy Carter, saving the life of a brave man. America didn't ask how the rescue operation would resonate among "moderate pirates" or how it would play "on the Arab street," noted William Kristol on "Fox News Sunday." Instead, the president did it the effective way -- unilaterally.

Now the big question is: Can we find the pirates' hiding places? That's difficult to do, but not impossible. There's no MapQuest to identify "pirate's lair." No GPS device will tell soldiers where to turn right or left. Like the Hamas terrorists who hide among innocents, pirates are difficult to eradicate inside their communities, particularly because many of them are teenagers protected by families and extended clan. Collateral damage would include the suffering of civilians. War, even when it's called "an overseas contingency operation," is hell.

Words shape perception, and euphemistic language obscures reality. Barack Obama, being a master of rhetoric, is tempted to imagine that his words are the reality. His new strategy for dealing with the Iranian nuclear threat is to dispense with the reasonable precondition that Iran shut down its nuclear program while talking. This also dispenses with the common sense born of experience in the interest of "sensitivity" for "Iran's pride." The strategy includes allowing Iranian technicians to keep their centrifuges spinning but not allowing them to enrich uranium for a bomb. Both sides could claim "victory."

But there's a problem. The inspectors not only don't know whether hidden enrichment sites are spinning but also don't know whether they're being stockpiled. We would have to take what the Iranians say on trust, which is like taking the word of pirates on trust. Former President Ronald Reagan, dealing with then-Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, agreed to trust, but only if it was "trust but verify." Barack Obama, who is certainly no Ronald Reagan, would count on the Iranians being as naive as he seems to be.

Administration officials want "to dialogue" with Tehran (bad grammar and all, speaking of language). Honest dialogue requires language with specific meaning. A strategy of "sensitivity" when the stakes are so high, whether with pirates on land or pirates at sea, is, to say the least, "inappropriate."

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About The Author

Suzanne Fields is a columnist with The Washington Times.

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Tony D
Obama directed that the hostage situation be resolved peacefully. When the Captain, escaped from the pirates, the SEALs had the pirates in their gun sights, but had no authority to shoot. The on scene Navy commander submitted at least two plans to rescue the Captain, but Obama did not respond. Since he couldn't get a clear decision from Obama, the on scene Navy commander made the decision to kill the pirates. The idea that the pirates were shot because the Captain was in immediate danger is a fig leaf to cover Obama's inability to give the order (above his pay grade) to kill the pirates. We all owe the on scene Navy commander a debt of graditude. Without his leadership, the humiliating spectacle of four pirates holding the US Navy at bay for 4 days would have continued for weeks and maybe even months. Unfortunately, our enemies now know that the United States is lead by a weak man who has no stomach for a fight and the inevitable killing.

Did he or didn't he?
Did the POTUS give the order or did he give the onscene commander the option to fire? Either way Bravo Zulu on a job well done. Just make sure the credit goes to where it belongs!
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