Barack Obama, Warlord - Page 3

Afghanistan is barely mentioned. You'd think with neighboring nuclear Pakistan teetering on the brink of disintegration and the deployment of 22,000 troops next door, a major speech by the President would be in the offing; to set goals, chart a course and bolster a flagging ally, but none seems forthcoming. When it comes to war, Barack Obama seems to prefer to lead in silence. He can fly to Iraq and bask in the glow of security largely provide by his predecessor, Bush, but he seems to have little to offer when it comes to Afghanistan. Whether he's experienced or not, the warlord Obama must make his case or else "all these losses" will serve no purpose and may in fact have to be "done again."

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Article comments

  • 1 - Mongo

    May 04, 2009 at 2:38 am

    Interesting parallel Dock, but I would venture to take a guess that The President and advisors are thinking about Pakistan a lot in this. If the U.S. can help bring some stability to Afganistan and more importantly stabilize the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan then it may be helpful in that way to unstable Pakistan.

    I hope we will also be able to draw parallels between President Obama and Prime Minister Churchill in their ability to communicate powerfully and inspire their peoples with the resolve they need to weather the crises they face.

  • 2 - jon_e_7

    May 04, 2009 at 3:05 am

    I believe Obama has stated (at inaugeraton?)his biggest challenge will be expectations; did Bush even leave the ranch in the first 100 days? Obama's presidency MAY be the best thing that's happened to the world in some time, but he clings to "the imperative of economic growth" so let's cross our fingers and hope real hard, cuz growth is also the credo of the cancer cell.

  • 3 - Mr. Dock Ellis

    May 04, 2009 at 9:32 pm

    Mongo,
    Obama needs to give a major speech, not ruminate in private. Bush did this for the surge, which after all is what this is with respect to Afghanistan. Real leadership on this demands he use the bully pulpit and use it forcefully.

    Our allies, our enemies and most of all, our soldiers need to know that this country and this president, however inexperienced he may be, support this effort 100%

  • 4 - jon_e_7

    May 04, 2009 at 9:46 pm

    Mr. Doc, after 8 years of Bush' saber-rattling, you want more?

  • 5 - Bliffle

    May 05, 2009 at 12:46 am

    Pakistan? Swat Valley? What Swat needs is a strongman. A Sultan. Sultan of Swat.

  • 6 - Clavos

    May 05, 2009 at 12:05 pm

    Obama's presidency MAY be the best thing that's happened to the world in some time...

    ...but probably won't be.

  • 7 - Bliffle

    May 05, 2009 at 5:05 pm

    Iraq was a stupid diversion that distracted attention from the REAL troublespots in Afghanistan and Pakistan. And now it allows Afghanistan itself to be a distraction from the REAL REAL troublespot in Pakistan.

    Will Obama allow Afghanistan to distract from Pakistan as his predecessor did?

    Pakistan has been playing us for suckers for 50 years. It's time to stop. Pull the economic and military aid (which the stupid venal Pakistanis have use for decades to prepare for a war with India that will never happen) and tell them to get their act in order (leash the ISI, quit playing footsy with Taliban, etc.) or prepare to be overrun by al Queda, at which point many hundreds of US nuke-tipped missiles are re-sighted for Pakistan, not because of empty saber-rattling threats, but because a radical rabid extremist al queda in charge of Pakistani nukes is a REAL concern to US security.

    The Paks have thought themselves clever for decades, but they have overplayed their hand.

  • 8 - Mr. Dock Ellis

    May 05, 2009 at 5:07 pm

    Umm.. Jon_e_7 newsflash the sword was actually drawn, so to speak, in Afghanistan seven years ago. BHO is adding more troops. Do you support them?

  • 9 - Cindy

    May 05, 2009 at 10:05 pm

    The grunts who serve become nothing more than push pins on a map somewhere.

    When weren't they?

    One hopes Obama could grow to understand what is necessary in war, so lives aren't thrown away recklessly.

    I'm afraid that's not in the cards as ever becoming a priority for governments and people who have power in them--any of them.

  • 10 - jon_e_7

    May 06, 2009 at 1:03 am

    Mr Dock, bad choice of metaphor on my part, and I do know something of the Afghan-American history, et al. I've been witness to the reaction as our Canadian soldiers are brot home in a bag, and no I don't support BHO on this. Linda McQuaig's book " Holding the Bully's Coat" (Canada's role in Afghanistan) nails it for me.

  • 11 - jon_e_7

    May 06, 2009 at 1:14 am

    Cindy, I share yor hope, but I'm saddened by the self-fufilling prophecy of yor last statement.

  • 12 - Cindy

    May 06, 2009 at 1:37 am

    jon,

    No worries, we just need to get rid of government. :-)

  • 13 - Cindy

    May 06, 2009 at 1:44 am

    Oh and jon, what's necessary regarding war, to me, is not to have one.

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