Hawkish GOP tone could blunt powerful attack on Obama and Hillary: The Libya Disaster

Oxon Hill, Md. —The top Republican presidential candidates speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference have predominantly shown a hawkish tone on foreign policy.

Potential presidential candidates Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, Rick Perry and Chris Christie have all knocked President Obama for not being more warlike, and promised a more aggressive foreign policy. Former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton just finished speaking, and his central criticism of Obama (and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton) was that they are “unwilling to do what was necessary to protect our country from foreign threats.”

The Hill covers this theme pretty well, with some highlights:

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) called for “A commander-in-chief who will actually stand up and defend the United States of America,” to roars from the crowd.

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) said the U.S. needs “a president, a leader who will stand up and say we’ll take the fight to them and not wait until they take the fight to American soil.”

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) said America must fight “a war on the evil that is radical Islamic terrorism.”

Setting aside policy for a moment, it seems to me that this approach has at least one political downside.

Attacking Obama so uniformly as a guy who doesn’t fight enough wars blunts a potentially very strong attack on Hillary Clinton: She played a central role in planning and executing Obama’s illegal, ill-advised, poorly executed and disastrous war in Libya.

I laid out in a recent column how damning Libya is for Obama — and the same applies to Hillary Clinton:

At every stage, though, the administration behaved shamefully. Obama never tried to persuade Americans his war was just. He never sought the congressional action that would have made his war — sorry, his “kinetic military action” — legal. At one point, administration officials even floated the idea that they could frustrate the intent of the 1973 War Powers Resolution and its 60-day limit on unauthorized wars by momentarily stopping and then immediately restarting U.S. involvement. Obama never told the truth, perhaps for fear it would make his war more unpopular. And he never made the commitment to staying and rebuilding that could have made his war a success.

I don’t know that dovish foreign policy is more popular than hawkish foreign policy. I do know that it becomes more difficult to attackone of Hillary’s most shameful episodes if your theme is that Obama and Hillary didn’t fight enough.

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