By John Fund
Sunday, August
22, 2021
There are countless stories that will
come out of the Afghan tragedy. But one of the more surprising is the
extent to which liberal media outlets and the foreign-policy establishment have
turned on President Joe Biden.
It’s certainly true that both groups
didn’t do enough to question the wisdom of expending thousands of lives and
trillions in treasure pursuing “nation-building” in Afghanistan after the
Taliban were initially defeated post-9/11. But their prior investment in that
position doesn’t fully explain the visceral and swift way in which they’ve
attacked Biden and his aides for the moral and logistical nightmare of the U.S.
withdrawal.
What I think we are seeing in part is
pent-up frustration with a Joe Biden whom the Beltway establishment has never
had much confidence or faith in.
Robert Gates, former defense secretary
under Obama, famously said in his 2014 memoir that Biden has been “wrong on
nearly every major foreign policy and national security issue over the past
four decades.” Leon Panetta, who served as CIA director and secretary of
defense under President Clinton, says Biden’s decision to withdraw was rooted in the
sad fact that Biden “didn’t really spend much
time on the issue” and that the Biden administration was simply “crossing their
fingers and hoping chaos would not result.”
Ryan Crocker, the former ambassador to
Afghanistan under Presidents George W. Bush and Obama, says Biden made more
than just an egregious policy mistake: “I’m left with some grave questions in
my mind about his ability to lead our nation as commander in chief.”
Even officials in his own administration
are pointing reporters to a 2019 Biden
interview in the Wall Street Journal in
which the then–presidential candidate criticized President Trump for
withdrawing the last U.S forces from Syria. Biden told the Journal that
“when we leave a vacuum, like he’s leaving it, it creates significant
opportunities for difficulty.”
Indeed, it is remarkable that officials in
the once nearly leak-proof Biden administration are making their displeasure
known. Tucker Carlson
noted on his Fox News show that “some of
Biden’s most senior appointees are contradicting him in public. If you cover
politics, it’s shocking to see that. This is a violation of the first and most
ruthlessly enforced rule in any White House: Don’t diminish the boss.”
What is going on here? No one knows for
sure, but one explanation I’ve been told several times is that media figures
and the establishment sources who leak them are boiling over with frustration
at how much Biden has disappointed them.
Biden came from way behind to win the
Democratic nomination in early 2020 largely owing to the onset of COVID and the
primal fear Democrats had that socialist Bernie Sanders would lose to Donald
Trump. Both groups latched on to Biden as a life preserver that kept afloat
their hope to defeat Trump. They cosseted him, they covered for him, they
pampered him incessantly, they excused his clearly slipping energy and
coherence. They went to extraordinary lengths, including censorship, to protect
him from stories such as the one over Hunter Biden’s laptop.
Despite all of their efforts, now Biden
has insisted on embarrassing them. Make no mistake, there is a
genuine collapse of confidence in Biden. They may kiss and make up because
Democratic control of Congress is at stake in 2022, but the wounds felt by the
establishment from Biden’s incompetence will remain.
They may even manifest themselves in
questions about just how up to the job Biden is. During the 2020 campaign,
Biden certainly thought the issue was fair game when directed at his rival.
President Trump was well known for his meandering monologues, short attention
span, and failure to listen. For Biden, that represented a basic issue of
competence: He said Trump “doesn’t seem cognitively aware of what’s going on. He either
reads and/or gets briefed on important issues and he forgets it, or he doesn’t
think it’s necessary that he needs to know it.”
For his part, Trump frequently referred to
Biden as “Sleepy Joe,” a figure who wasn’t up to the job. In August 2020, Biden
had had enough. During an ABC interview, he said, “Watch me, Mr. President,” as he gestured on camera for Trump to approach him. He
urged voters to look at him and running-mate Kamala Harris and see “what kind
of shape we’re in.”
Well, we’ve been watching Biden in office
for seven months now, and the reports aren’t reassuring. Michael McKenna,
a Washington Times columnist, says the president’s daily
schedule seems to have been sparse indeed.
“There are seldom two meetings on the
presidential schedule, and there have only been a handful of trips to places
other than Delaware,” he notes. “Announcements of the closure of the
news-making portion of the day (“lids”) have been called as early as 11 a.m. During
and after the fall of Kabul, the president was at Camp David, apparently by
himself.” As for media exposure, he notes Biden has given less than ten
in-person on-camera interviews, compared with the 50 that Trump and the 110
that President Obama, his former boss, had conducted by this point in their
presidencies.
McKenna may well be a biased observer,
having served as deputy director of the Office of Legislative Affairs in the
Trump White House. But he is a serious student of the presidency and says that
“this leadership, or lack thereof, and its tempo dates back to the campaign and
is exceedingly unusual for a sitting president.”
It is curious that the Big Kahuna of the
Democratic establishment, Barack Obama, has been silent about all aspects of
how his former vice president has handled Afghanistan. Obama and Biden have
always had a fraught relationship. Obama aides would often make disparaging
comments about Biden’s internal advice, such as his opposition to the raid that
killed Osama bin Laden in 2011. Ben Rhodes, Obama’s former deputy
national-security adviser, wrote in his memoir that “in the Situation Room,
Biden could be something of an unguided missile.”
Obama also frustrated Biden by applying
pressure on him not to run for president in 2016. Biden himself recalled that
in a private meeting “the president was not encouraging.” Biden finally chose
not to run in 2016 after Obama made it crystal clear he favored Hillary
Clinton. Biden’s decision came at the last minute, after consulting with Obama.
Biden had already scouted out office space and sounded out people to work on
his campaign.
Obama wasn’t high on Biden’s
strengths. Politico
reported that “one Democrat who spoke to
Obama recalled the former president warning, ‘Don’t underestimate Joe’s ability
to f*** things up.’” During the 2020 campaign, Obama told one 2020 candidate:
“And you know who really doesn’t have it? Joe Biden.”
The question that Biden’s media allies and
the Washington establishment are now privately wondering: Is the Afghan
disaster an aberration, or will the calculated risk they took in helping Biden
into the White House prove to be an unending series of headaches and embarrassments?
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