By Charlie Daniels
In my soon to be 77 years as a citizen of the United States of America,
having lived through Japan's sneak attack on Pearl Harbor, the dark
days of WWII, Korea, Vietnam, Watergate, 9/11 and all the other serious
and profound events our beloved nation has been involved in over the
last three quarters of a century, I have to say with all sincerity that I
have never seen a president as confused, befuddled, impotent, insincere
and as out of his depth as Barack Obama has become in dealing with the
Syrian issue.
When you're the leader of the free world, you don't make statements you
can't back up and you don't draw lines in the sand, watch your enemies
cross them with impunity and go off and play a round of golf.
Obama painted himself and the nation into a corner with his “red line”
statement and I truly believe he thought he would have unilateral
international and domestic support only to find himself standing alone
in the spotlight with egg on his face and a ticking political time bomb
in his hand.
I don't believe he ever had any intention of going through Congress and
only decided to do so when he was left without the support of
traditional allies and the disdain of a war weary American public who
have begun to feel that America cannot be the international police force
who has to bear the brunt of every catastrophe.
I think Obama is taking the vote for military authorization to Congress
to bail himself out, to buy some time, somebody to share the blame if
all goes wrong. Obama had already positioned war ships. All that was
left to do was give the order to fire the missiles and at the 11th hour,
after being rejected by the British parliament and put off by the
French, he started having second thoughts and reached for the life
preserver.
I, for one, am glad that Obama - for whatever reason - political
expediency notwithstanding, did not facilitate the missile attack as it
would have been largely symbolic and cosmetic and as he had given Assad
enough warning to move the weapons out of harms way would have done
little if anything to rid the world of chemical weapons.
It's not that I think nothing should be done about weapons of mass
destruction no matter where they're used in the world, but I believe
it's not just the responsibility of the United States to enforce
international law. If the civilized nations of the world shirk this
duty, why should they think America should take on the job by itself?
America has done enough "sending signals", symbolic gestures, getting
involved in situations that don't threaten our national interests or
that of our allies.
America's leaders should guard their tongues well and not issue spur of
the moment reactions and empty threats. Our bite should be a lot worse
than our bark and a presidential warning should be a dire and solemn
caution, issued only once and followed up with swift and decisive
action, not some half-baked puff of bravado that nobody really takes
seriously.
What little bit of credibility America had in the Middle East just went
out the window Friday afternoon, as a president who let his ego
overload his common sense backed down from a tin horned dictator of a
third world country, or at least that's how it's viewed in that part of
the world.
The mettle of a president and the people he surrounds himself with is
not proven until push comes to shove. This nation has entered a new
phase in the war on terror and our relativity in the rest of the world
and the road is going to be long, rocky and dangerous.
It remains to be seen how this embarrassing situation will play out.
Will the president seek the council of the more experienced advice
available to him in Congress? Or, will he remain defiant and continue to
go it alone.
You've cost America a great deal this past week, Mr. President.
How much more can we take?
What do you think?
Pray for our troops and the peace of Jerusalem.
God Bless America.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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