Patrick Buchanan: The Unraveling Of Obama’s Foreign Policy – OpEd

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Three days after Ambassador Chris Stevens was assassinated, Jay Carney told the White House press corps it had been the work of a flash mob inflamed by an insulting video about the Prophet Muhammad.

As the killers had arrived with rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons, this story seemed noncredible on its face.

Yet two days later, U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice doubled down. Appearing on five Sunday talk shows, she called the massacre the result of a “spontaneous” riot that was neither “preplanned” nor “premeditated.”

Carney and Rice deceived us. But were they deceived?

It is impossible to believe that Carney would characterize the Benghazi, Libya, massacre as the result of a protest that careened out of control unless he had been told to do so by the national security adviser, the White House chief of staff or President Barack Obama himself.

Who told Carney to say what he did? Who arranged for Rice to appear on five shows to push this line?

Throwing a rope to Rice and Carney, the director of national intelligence, James Clapper, said last week that only recently had his team concluded that Benghazi was the work of terrorists.

Yet intelligence insiders were leaking to the press the day after Stevens was murdered that it was terrorism.

Now that the cover story — that the murder of Stevens and the other Americans was the result of a spontaneous outburst the Obama administration could not have foreseen or prevented — has collapsed, the truth is tumbling out.

And the truth is more alarming. For it calls into question the credibility and competence of Obama’s security team and the judgment of the president himself.

What do we now know?

Stevens believed he was on an al-Qaida hit list and so wrote in his diary. He was concerned about a rise in Islamic extremism in the city. “Days before the ambassador arrived from the embassy in Tripoli,” The Washington Post reported Sunday, “Westerners had fled the city, and the British had closed their consulate.”

Rice insisted that the act of barbarism arose out of a protest, but there may not even have been a protest, just a military assault with RPGs, machine guns and mortars that hit a safe house a mile from the consulate, killing two former Navy SEALs, while other U.S. agents fled to the airport.

So dangerous is Benghazi, The New York Times reported Friday, FBI agents investigating the ambassador’s assassination have yet to venture into the city.

Was U.S. intelligence oblivious to how dangerous Benghazi was when Stevens went in? Was not Benghazi’s reputation as a haven for Islamic jihadi known to us all before we “liberated” Libya?

This is the city U.S. air power saved when Moammar Gadhafi’s forces were closing in. It now appears to be an al-Qaidaville where U.S. diplomats and agents dare not tread.

Late last week, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton conceded that the Benghazi murders were acts of terror perpetrated by extremists associated with al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb. She alluded to Mali, where an al-Qaida affiliate, the Ansar Dine, has taken over half the country.

How grave is that threat?

On Thursday, The Associated Press reported that Gen. Carter Ham, head of the U.S. Africa command, met with Mauretania’s president to discuss “a possible military intervention … in north Mali against al-Qaida-linked group members and their allies.”

Yet Vice President Joe Biden still campaigns through the Rust Belt bellowing, “General Motors is alive, and Osama bin Laden is dead,” and Obama still recites his mantra, “al-Qaida is on the path to defeat.”

The reality. Al-Qaida affiliates have taken over a region of Mali the size of France. Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb may have been in on the Benghazi massacre. Al-Qaida is in Syria fighting for a cause, the overthrow of Bashar Assad, Obama supports. Al-Qaida has helped reignite sectarian war in Iraq. Al-Qaida remains in Pakistan. Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula is in Yemen.

We failed to cut out or kill the cancer at Tora Bora in 2001, and it has since metastasized and spread across North Africa, the Middle East and South Asia.

As for the Arab Spring Obama embraced, that has given us the Muslim Brotherhood in Cairo and jihadi in Sinai. Our departure from Iraq paved the way to a new sectarian war. The surge troops are out of Afghanistan, and the remaining U.S. troops no longer partner with the Afghan soldiers who are to take over the war.

Any doubt about the outcome there when we’re gone?

Within the past month, anti-American riots, flag burnings and the raising of Islamist banners atop U.S. embassy facilities have occurred in too many countries and capitals to recite.

If this is the fruit of a successful engagement with the Islamic world, what would a debacle look like? Rep. Paul Ryan said Sunday, “The Obama foreign policy is unraveling literally before our eyes on our TV screens.”

Is he wrong?

Patrick J Buchanan

Patrick J. Buchanan is an American conservative political commentator, author, syndicated columnist, politician and broadcaster.

4 thoughts on “Patrick Buchanan: The Unraveling Of Obama’s Foreign Policy – OpEd

  • October 2, 2012 at 12:25 pm
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    Patrick Buchanan’s article is nothing new. Its basically verbal diarrhea .Elections is nearing and rhetoric is flying in the face of commonsense. The Ambassador was killed-whether he was killed by a mob or by Al Queada it was a sad day for America and Americans. Does it matter how or who killed him. Why was he killed is the more important question. What is the news on the ground-why does the main stream media interview the man on the street in Benghazi so that we all know why the Libyans are so angry with the United States?
    One only needs to read the 9/11 Commission report to ascertain the grave errors that led to so many deaths!
    I think it is important to leave Libya to the Libyans, Afghanistan to Afghans and Iraq to the Iraqis. Charity begins at home-we need a strong US President like Obama to end the war all over the world-it brings with it enemies and loss of treasure. We need to restructure the US economy not on the Military Industrial Complex [MIC] but for goods and services non-military. Now the US is dependent on the MIC for jobs. This is ridiculous. Romney was unhappy that US is pulling out of Iraq-he is worried about jobs in the security industry-that is ridiculous. What about the dead Americans, injured warriors who are unemployed and lack medical care. Let us have jobs that are not dependent on the MIC.
    We need better roads, bridges, educational institutions that provide cheaper education, cut doctors bills, curtail the pharmaceutical and insurance companies, tax them like the oil companies and let the American people have a peaceful and prosperous life. We need a good, honest government that looks after the American people and not companies.
    Support Obama.

    Reply
  • October 2, 2012 at 2:18 pm
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    Are we supposed to believe that automatic weapons and RPG’s are rare in Benghazi?

    Premeditation may have occurred, but the use of these weapons is not proof of a planned attack. The ambassador clearly knew of the increased threat, yet insisted (apparently) on being there himself.

    How all this shows Obama’s foreign policy is faulty escapes me. Engagement with new powers in the Third World is our most hopeful option. The Third World will sometimes respond with violence, a natural backlash against the neocolonial violence they endured.

    Reply
  • October 3, 2012 at 12:45 am
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    The Obama apologists are out in force trying to muddy the waters once again. Pay no attention to the yea-sayers who trumpet falsehoods & word-twistings which are the hallmark of this administration. Your column is right on. As they say, the truth hurts. Kudos.

    Reply
  • October 3, 2012 at 6:38 am
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    Americans removed ‘Saddam” Gaddafi on orders of Saudi salafists and this is the price they are going to pay for a long time to come.

    Reply

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