Hugh Hewitt

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Obama orders the Second Surge

By: Hugh Hewitt
Examiner Columnist
March 29, 2009

A new president unveiled a new surge last week, and the announcement ought to have been greeted by sustained applause by everyone who cheered President George W. Bush’s surge policy in Iraq.

President Barack Obama appears to have adopted his predecessor’s commitment to following the advice of his top generals –especially that of General David Petraeus—and the announcement of 4,000 more troops to Afghanistan on top of the 17,000 reinforcements already committed by the new administration is an important signal of American resolve in the war against Islamist jihadism.
 
Max Boot hit exactly the right note when he opined at Commentary Magazine’s blog “Contentions” that the new surge that Obama “unveiled at the White House today was pretty much all that supporters of the war effort could have asked for, and probably pretty similar to what a President McCain would have decided on.”
 
The new troops will bring the American forces to around 60,000, and the continued missile strikes on Taliban and al Qaeda leadership no matter on which side of the border they are found telegraph that even as the stability and progress in Iraq broadens and deepens, a similar emphasis on counterinsurgency will be given the time it needs to work in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.
 
Writing at the excellent Long War Journal (www.longwarjournal.org) Thomas Joscelyn and Bill Roggio review the many impediments to peace in Afghanistan, and there is no realistic assessment of the region that doesn’t include a conclusion that stability in Afghanistan and thus security for those nations threatened by al Qaeda and its host culture of the Taliban will require years and years of sustained effort in Afghanistan.
 
A separate entry by Roggio notes that recently hefty prices have been offered by the U.S.   for Pakistan Taliban commander Baitullah Mehsud and Taliban/alQadea ally Sirajuddin Haggani and a million for al Qaeda propagandist Abu Yahya al Libi. These are the sort of incremental upping-of-the-ante tactics that announces the new administration’s strategy of victory and not retreat in the region.
 
So why so little coverage in the Mainstream Media or for that matter in center-right media? A nearly 100% increase in force levels in a difficult theater is a major development in the war on terror under any circumstances, but when it comes from a new president whose party includes a significant caucus of anti-war extremists and even greater numbers of activists deeply suspicious of the use of American military power, it is a hugely important development.
 
Obama’s embrace of the need for victory there no matter how long it takes nor how much it costs in lives and treasure does make it a war the conduct of which becomes a measure of his success as president.
 
Bush left him a tentative victory in Iraq but nothing close to such stability in Afghanistan, and Obama has now pledged himself to victory there. When he seeks re-election in 2012, the progress that has been achieved in Afghanistan will be a significant factor in his claim on a second term.
 
Which is perhaps why ideological media –and all media these days are increasingly recognized as ideological media—is so tentative in its discussion of the president’s declaration.
 
The hawks must realize that if Obama delivers on security and stability in Afghanistan, the case for change in the White House will be significantly weakened. The doves must realize that their own standard bearer has repudiated their most cherished tropes about the war and how it must be waged, if at all.
 
Afghanistan is part of a global war on terror that many on the left deny is a war in any meaningful sense of the word. 60,000 troops in harm’s way, and billions more in aid to both Pakistan and Afghanistan certify the long war as real and the threat from Islamist extremism as clear and present.
 
And of course Obama’s embrace of the need for victory endangers the left’s deep hatred of Bush. If four years from now the war is still tough going, Osama bin Laden is still at large, Pakistan is still unstable, and the need for continuing commitment still obvious, it will be hard indeed for the left to continue its war on the first president who saw what needed to be done despite its difficulty, unless it adds a second president to its list of alleged fear mongering imperialists.
 
Examiner columnist Hugh Hewitt is a law professor at Chapman University Law School and a nationally syndicated radio talk show host who blogs daily at HughHewitt.com.
 



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Ashby

Mar 30, 2009

How do you reconcile this action in Afghanistan with his actions in the US regarding General Motors? He is no hawk. He is a vulture.

 

The Drum and Cannon

Mar 30, 2009

Hugh, you may have been suckered. Do you really think that when the American people turn against this war, like they did Iraq and Vietnam, that The Anointed One will have the courage or principles to carry it through like Dubya did? Don't bet on it. Just as he threw his pastor and his grandmother under the bus, he would do the same with the U.S. military. He has no conscience or principles.

 

Don Emmerich, Jr.

Mar 30, 2009

Obama is hardly the standard-bearer for doves. Being against mass-murder -- i.e., being against war -- is a principled position that principled individuals hold regardless of their leaders' actions.

 

john sturtz

Mar 30, 2009

Obama made a lot of promises and mislead so many people on so many issues. He's a great "POLITICIAN" -perhaps the ugliest word in the English Language.

 

Truth Squad

Mar 30, 2009

What Obama and thinking people everywhere have argued all along is that Afghanistan is the locus of terrorism. Iraq was a distraction and a huge mistake. This facts and logic of this column are grotesquely twisted. Why is it that the Right Wing can publish this bs with a straight face?

 

Jerry M

Mar 31, 2009

Obama is a great con artist. Have you ever met a con artist who wasn't well spoken, likable and believable. That is why he is so dangerous and it is taking the country so long to realize what a disaster he will be for our future if he continues to go unchecked.

 

Jill

Apr 15, 2009

The lefties voice, Obama is just a talking head with absolutely no substance.

 


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