By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
According to legend, if not actual historians, Harold
Macmillan was once asked what he most feared could derail his agenda. The
British prime minister allegedly said, “Events, my dear boy, events.”
Macmillan may never have actually said it, but the quote endures
because it gets at a fundamental truth of politics (and life). Facts on the
ground can deliver a fatal blow to one’s most cherished plans.
The line kept coming to mind as I listened to President
Obama’s remarkable news conference Monday from the G-20 meeting in Turkey.
Asked again and again whether he underestimated the threat from Islamic State,
a group he once dismissed as a “JV team,” the president said, in effect, “no.”
Of course, he used a lot more words, but that was the
gist: “It’s important for us to get the strategy right, and the strategy that
we are pursuing is the right one.” He added that “the terrible events in Paris
were obviously a terrible and sickening setback.”
Critics who disagree, he said, shouldn’t “pop off” with
their half-baked and ill-considered opinions. He’s “not interested” in what he
sees as mere sloganeering about “American leadership or America winning” that
distract him from his strategy.
The contrast with remarks by French president Francois
Hollande, addressing Parliament on Monday, was remarkable. Had Hollande’s
speech been delivered by a Republican presidential candidate, Obama would
probably have dismissed it as more popping off. Hollande pledged to wage war
“without a respite, without a truce. . . . It is not a question of containing
but of destroying this organization.”
Obama’s bloodlessly detached and condescendingly
professorial remarks seemed oddly reminiscent of those excruciating news conferences
during the Iraq War when George W. Bush couldn’t bring himself to admit he made
any mistakes.
The day before the Paris attack, Obama insisted that
Islamic State was “contained.” He may have meant, as he now claims, that he was
merely talking about its territorial holdings in Iraq and Syria (leaving out
its gains in Libya, Afghanistan, the Sinai, and its successful terror attacks
elsewhere). But when people hear that a threat has been contained, they can be
forgiven for thinking that rules out mass killings in Paris.
And that’s the bedeviling thing about events — the enemy
gets to create them. Obama has all but admitted that the Islamic State forced
his hand by chopping off the heads of American hostages.
For Republicans, the attacks in Paris — not to mention in
Turkey, Beirut, and above Egypt (the Islamic State almost surely brought down
that Russian plane) — are just more proof that Obama’s foreign policy is a
mess.
In a more rational climate, this would be a moment for
presidential candidates with serious foreign-policy chops to shine and for
candidates such as Donald Trump and Ben Carson to recede. That is, unless you
actually believe Trump when he says, “I know more about ISIS than the generals
do, believe me.”
But even Trump, in his own way, seems more attuned to
events as they unfold than Obama and the Democrats running to replace him.
In Saturday’s Democratic debate, all three of the
candidates struggled as the ground shifted under their feet. They bristled at
the suggestion that we are at war with “radical Islam.” Saying so, according to
Hillary Rodham Clinton, would be “painting with too broad a brush.”
Senator Bernie Sanders, whose campaign furiously
protested the CBS decision to shift the focus to terrorism, seemed despondent
that he had to talk about the subject.
Former Maryland governor Martin O’Malley was far more
comfortable with the change, insisting that we must take in even more refugees
from Syria.
That was a minority view even before it was revealed that
at least one of the Paris terrorists had been a “refugee.” You can be sure it’s
even less popular now, which is why the roster of U.S. states seeking measures
to bar Syrian refugees is growing rapidly.
For now, most Democrats stand with Obama in his denial.
One wonders how long that resolve will last in the face of even one more
“setback” to Obama’s successful strategy.
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