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Obama Camp:McCain Following the Leader
n Foreign Policy, McCain Following." Full text after the jump.The question remains, though, whether the mainstream media will accept this framing, and if they do, will it resonate with voters? In 2004, all of the information available pointed to the disaster that was the Bush administration, but in the end, enough voters couldn't get over the general impression that Republicans are the party of national security.
As I said several days ago, the true test of Obama's road trip will be to see if he can move the poll numbers on foreign policy and security issues. In the era of so-called "Low-information voters," it can take a long time for things like this to sink in.
Obama's job, now, is to continue his trip without completely blowing it. His stated intention to talk less, and listen more , hits just the right note. The media will take care of politicizing the trip, so Obama is wise to stand aside.
The McCain campaign also might want to lay low for awhile. It seems like whenever they open their mouth, reality steps up to offer a rebuttal.
To: Interested Parties
From: The Obama Campaign
RE: Obama Leading on Foreign Policy, McCain Following
There are two problems with John McCain's political attacks on Barack Obama's foreign policy. First, on the biggest foreign policy questions of the last eight years, Barack Obama has made the right judgment and John McCain has sided with George Bush in making the wrong one. Second, the failure of the McCain-Bush foreign policy has forced John McCain to change his position, and to embrace the very same Obama approaches that he once attacked.
Just this week, Senator McCain has been forced by events to switch to Barack Obama's position on two fundamental issues: more troops in Afghanistan, and more diplomacy with Iran. On both issues, Obama took stands that weren't politically popular at the time – opposing the war in Iraq as a diversion from the critical mission in Afghanistan, and standing up for direct diplomacy with Iran – while John McCain lined up with George Bush. Time has proven Obama's judgment right and McCain wrong.
The next shift appears to be Iraq. For months, Senator McCain has called any plan to redeploy our troops from Iraq "surrender" – even though we'd be leaving Iraq to a sovereign Iraqi government. Now, the Bush Administration is embracing the negotiation of troop withdrawals with the Iraqi government – a position that Senator Obama called for last September, and reiterated on Monday in the New York Times. And now, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki supports Barack Obama's timeline, telling Der Speigel that, "Barack Obama is right when he talks about 16 months."
Afghanistan –
· McCain at the beginning of the week: more of the same
· McCain at the end of the week: more troops
Barack Obama said in 2002 that we had to finish the fight against Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda in Afghanistan instead of invading Iraq. John McCain was George Bush's biggest supporter for a war in Iraq that took our eye off of Afghanistan, arguing that we would be "greeted as liberators"; that democracy would spread across the region; and that we could "muddle through" in Afghanistan. On the most important foreign policy judgment of our generation, Obama got it right and McCain got it wrong.
Since then, our overwhelming focus on Iraq has caused us to shortchange Afghanistan. The result is clear. Osama bin Laden is still at large. Al Qaeda has reconstituted a sanctuary along the Pakistani border. The Taliban is on the offensive. June was the highest casualty month of the war. And Obama's judgment was reaffirmed earlier this month, when Admiral Mullen, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said, "I don't have troops I can reach for, brigades I can reach, to send into Afghanistan until I have a reduced requirement in Iraq."
Barack Obama has consistently called for more troops and resources in Afghanistan. In August of 2007, he called for at least two additional U.S. combat brigades and $1 billion in non-military assistance. Senator McCain continued to march in lockstep with the failed Bush policy, and even argued earlier this year that "Afghanistan is not in trouble because of our diversion to Iraq." This past week, Senator McCain changed his position for political reasons, embracing Obama's call for more troops the day after Obama restated it in a New York Times op-ed, and almost one year after Obama's initial plan. McCain's proposal was complicated by the fact that the McCain campaign couldn't even get its answer straight on whether those troops would come from the U.S. or our NATO allies – leading the Times to wonder "how well formed his ideas are."
SENDING MORE TROOPS TO AFGHANISTAN
Gergen: "In The Last Two Days We've Seen Twice Now The Bush Administration Reverse Itself And Take Positions That Are Much Closer To Obama's," Added "The Greater Danger To Our Troops Right Now Is In Afghanistan. That's What Obama's Been Arguing All Along." David Gergen: "For the last few months, John McCain has had the upper hand in the arguments about foreign policy, as one of the chief architects of a surge that Obama voted against and then it seemed to work. And yet in the last two days we've seen twice now the Bush administration reverse itself and take positions that are much closer to Obama's. Last night we talked about the fact that suddenly the Bush administration had reversed course and was going to begin talking directly to Iran this weekend, and now tonight we're talking about them reversing course and saying we must send more troops into Afghanistan, and Afghanistan is becoming in many ways at least as dangerous as Iraq. You know, last -- in June, there were virtually the same number of American troops who died in Afghanistan as in Iraq, and yet in Iraq we have five times as many troops. So the danger, the greater danger to our troops right now is in Afghanistan. That's what Obama's been arguing all along." [Anderson Cooper, CNN, 7/16/08]
LA Times Columnist: After Years Of Saying Afghanistan Was Not A Threat, McCain Is Now Calling For More Troops There, "Maybe Because Barack Obama Keeps Hammering Away At The Issue." LA Times columnist Rosa Brooks wrote, "Immediately after 9/11, McCain shared the widespread view that the U.S. should go to war in Afghanistan to take out those responsible for the 9/11 attacks. But by late November 2001, he wanted to "move on to the next country." Uh-huh: "Next up, Baghdad!" Of course, we stayed in Afghanistan too, but McCain had gotten tired of it. By April 2003, he said that "nobody in Afghanistan threatens the United States of America," so we could focus instead on the shiny new war in Iraq. "We don't read about [Afghanistan] anymore, because it's succeeded," he explained in October 2005. But Iraq started getting boring too, so now McCain has turned his restless attention back to Afghanistan -- maybe because Barack Obama keeps hammering away at the issue. (Obama, who's been fairly consistent on Afghanistan for six years now, is either the rare politician who doesn't suffer from ADD, or he's smart enough to take his meds.)" [Rosa Brooks Column, LA Times, 7/17/08]
IRAN
· McCain at the beginning of the week: against high-level talks with Iran
· McCain at the end of the week: praised Bush Administration's high-level talks with Iran
Barack Obama has consistently said that our policy of not pursuing direct diplomacy with Iran has failed, and he has made it clear that he favors direct talks with the Iranian regime in order to advance our interests. Senator McCain and President Bush have ridiculed Obama's support for direct diplomacy with the Iranian regime. In his trip to Israel, President Bush took implicit aim at Senator Obama, and suggested his proposals for tough diplomacy constituted "appeasement," while McCain said Obama's approach was "naive" and "shows a lack of experience.
Here is the record of the McCain-Bush approach. Iran has advanced its illicit nuclear program. Iran is now enriching uranium, and has reportedly stockpiled 150 kilos of low enriched uranium. Iran's support for terrorism has increased. Iran's threats toward Israel have increased. Those are the facts, they cannot be denied. McCain has fully supported this failed policy, while Obama has called for a new direction.
This week the Bush administration finally appeared to recognize that it is reckless refusal to participate in talks with our European allies and the Iranian regime had failed. The Bush Administration shifted its policy, and is sending a top-ranking State Department official to join in nuclear talks across the table from Iran in Geneva Senator McCain, a long-time critic of diplomatic engagement with Iran, now changed his position to Obama's and said that he had "no problem...whatsoever" with this high-level diplomatic engagement with Iran. For the second time in one week, events on the ground forced John McCain to change his position to embrace an Obama position.
TALKS WITH IRAN
Stephanopoulous: "Undersecretary Of State William Burns Will Be Meeting With The Iranians This Weekend As Part Of Their Nuclear Talks," Obama Has "Been Calling For Those Kind Of Talks For A Long Time." George Stephanopoulous said, "Senator McCain has moved more towards Barack Obama's position on Afghanistan, calling for two or three more brigades in Afghanistan which Obama's called for a long time and watch for this, Chris. We just learned today that the Undersecretary of State William Burns will be meeting with the Iranians this weekend as part of their nuclear talks. Watch for the Obama campaign to say this vindicates Barack Obama's position. He's been calling for those kind of talks for a long time." [ABC Good Morning America, 7/16/08]
Gibson: Bush Administration Insisted It Would Not Talk With Iran, But Its New Willingness to Talk "Is Essentially What Barack Obama Has Been Proposing." Charlie Gibson: "The Bush administration, for years, has insisted it would not talk with Iran until Iran suspended its nuclear enrichment program. That policy was reversed today. The State Department said it will send Undersecretary of State William Burns to meet face-to-face with Iran's nuclear negotiator this weekend. So, Martha Raddatz is here to explain what seems like a major turnaround...There are political implications to this because this is essentially what Barack Obama has been proposing, isn't it?" Martha Raddatz said, "It sure sounds like it, Charlie. There's a good quote today, from John Bolton, the former U.N. ambassador. He said this is like getting an Obama administration six months early. The White House says it's very different. But it sure sounds like it's heading in that direction." [ABC World News, 7/16/08]
Bolton Sarcastically Said Bush Shift Toward Talking To Iran "Is The State Department Effort To Insure A Smooth Transition To The Obama Administration." John Bolton said of the Bush Administration's agreeing to talks with Ira, "Even if this is a one time only event in the Bush administration, it legitimizes the Obama administration to do the same thing," he said. "It undercuts McCain, and Republicans on the Hill. This is the State Department effort to insure a smooth transition to the Obama administration." [New York Sun, 7/17/08]
Washington Post: While Bush Administration Opposed US Officials Accompanying Solana To Iran Talks, "Obama Campaign Officials Had Said That One Of The First Steps He Would Take As President Would Be To End The Ban On U.S. Officials Accompanying Solana." "Administration officials have long insisted that U.S. representatives would not join even preliminary discussions with Tehran until it stops enriching uranium -- a distinction that presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama has called counterproductive. In June, when Solana traveled to Tehran to present a sweetened offer to Iran to negotiate, the United States pointedly did not join other members of the international coalition in sending a senior official to the meeting. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said at the time that no U.S. representative would attend unless 'Iran suddenly has a change of tune and says that they will meet the demands of the international community, which are expressed in U.N. Security Council resolutions.' European officials hailed the news that Burns would come to Geneva as a breakthrough, one that sends a clear message to Iran that the international community is interested in negotiating a solution to the nuclear impasse. 'It is a very interesting and important sign by the United States,' one senior European official said last night. Obama campaign officials had said that one of the first steps he would take as president would be to end the ban on U.S. officials accompanying Solana." [Washington Post, 7/15/08]
The Guardian: McCain has "no problem...whatsoever" with high-level talks with Iran. "John McCain, said he had 'no problem . . . whatsoever' with Burns going to the Geneva meeting, but repeated said he would not meet Ahmadinejad. " [The Guardian (London), 7/18/08]
IRAQ
Barack Obama has consistently called for a responsible redeployment of our troops from Iraq so that we can press the Iraqis to take responsibility for their country, restore our military, and finish the fight in Afghanistan. It is in America's interests to end the Iraq War responsibly, and it is in the interest of the Iraqi people to have a government that reconciles its differences and takes responsibility for the future of Iraq.
John McCain has consistently labeled any plan to remove U.S. troops from Iraq as "surrender." However, just this week, the White House agreed on a "general time horizon" for the removal of U.S. troops from Iraq. And speaking to Der Spiegel, Prime Minister Maliki said, "Barack Obama is right when he talks about 16 months." He went on to say, "Artificially prolonging the tenure of US troops in Iraq would cause problems."
Senator McCain has said that we must leave Iraq when the sovereign government of Iraq wants us to. Now that the White House has shifted closer to Senator Obama's position on negotiating the redeployment of our troops from Iraq, and the Prime Minister of the sovereign government of Iraq has endorsed Senator Obama's 16 month timeline, will Senator McCain shift his position on redeploying troops from Iraq? Why does Senator McCain refuse to press the Iraqis to stand up? Why does Senator McCain want to stay in Iraq longer than we need to and longer than the Iraqis want us to? Does Senator McCain think it would be "surrender" to leave Iraq to the Iraqi government?
Council on Foreign Relations, McCain: "I don't see how we could stay when our whole emphasis and policy has been based on turning the Iraqi government over to the Iraqi people" QUESTION: Let me give you a hypothetical, senator. What would or should we do if, in the post-June 30th period, a so-called sovereign Iraqi government asks us to leave, even if we are unhappy about the security situation there? I understand it's a hypothetical, but it's at least possible. McCAIN: Well, if that scenario evolves, then I think it's obvious that we would have to leave because- if it was an elected government of Iraq- and we've been asked to leave other places in the world. If it were an extremist government, then I think we would have other challenges, but I don't see how we could stay when our whole emphasis and policy has been based on turning the Iraqi government over to the Iraqi people. http://www.cfr.org/publication/6973/ {April 22, 2004}
Obama Lands In Afghanistan Had the Chicken
As John McCain predicted, Barack Obama is on the ground in Afghanistan, landing at 3:15 this morning. From
the Obama campaign, via email:Note from Robert Gibbs:The trip is an important one for Obama, as the eyes of every voter in America are watching the Democratic Senator and nominee for President. Also watching closely is an army of Obama opponents, made up of a coalition of McCain supporters and former Clinton supporters, waiting to amplify any misstep.
At approximately 3:15 AM Eastern/2:15 AM Central, I received a phone call telling me that Senator Obama had landed at the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan.
Since leaving Washington on Thursday, Senator Obama had stopped and visited troops in Kuwait.
ROBERT GIBBS
Senior Strategist for Communications and Message
As David Knowles reported earlier, the trip is off to a good start for Obama, politically.
Here is a comically detailed pool report that the Obama campaign sent out with their announcement:
Background:
This is a pool report for July 17 for flight from Chicago's Midway Airport to Washington's Reagan National Airport, followed by motorcade to Andrews Air Force Base. All times are local for the geography mentioned. Please note that the campaign said it would be holding this for distribution until it confirmed Sen. Obama was on the ground in Afghanistan.
Report:
The motorcade left Sen. Obama's home in Chicago's Kenwood neighborhood at 11:11 a.m. There was one Chicago Police Department patrol car, followed by two SUVs, a sedan and a press van. Riding in the press van were agent Jill, Sam, John McCormick of the Chicago Tribune and Glen Johnson of The Associated Press.
The motorcade headed north on Lake Shore Drive to I-55 (Stevenson Expressway) and toward MDW. The CPD blocked traffic for our turn onto the western perimeter of the airfield, where we arrived at 11:31 a.m.
Waiting on the tarmac was a Gulfstream III (G3) executive jet (tail number N366JA). We exited our respective vehicles at 11:34 a.m.
The crew was waiting outside for the senator's arrival and a few photos with him near a wing. He was wearing tan slacks and a short black jacket. After fishing around in the back of one of the SUVs for his luggage (he seemed especially to be checking his suits inside a garment bag), he was on the bird by 11:36 a.m.
Also getting on the plane were eight Secret Service agents and the two reporters. The senator briefly greeted us as we walked past his seat in the forward section. Seated near him was senior spokeswoman Linda Douglass, the only staff member on the flight.
After everyone found a seat on the crowded plane, the pilot announced that the flying time would be between 80 and 85 minutes. All seemed eager for him to start the engines, since the plane had been sitting under a hot sun and the cabin temperature was likely somewhere in the 90s. Sweat had begun to roll down the faces of some of the agents.
"We're just easing you into it," Obama told his bodyguards, referring to the heat and the desert weather they would all be traveling to in the coming days.
As the plane taxied, the senator, wearing a short-sleeve black shirt, chatted with Douglass. The plane was wheels up at 11:55 a.m.
Your pool asked Douglass if we could chat with the senator about his upcoming trip. She said she would check, but later told us that we would only get a brief chance to ask him a couple questions once at Reagan National Airport.
Janis, our stewardess, first served the senator his lunch (chicken and rice and broccoli). Everyone else had sandwiches, wraps, chips and candy (yes, just like on the bus), although we were served on china and given green place settings and cloth napkins.
As the plane peaked around 41,000 feet and 500 knots, according to the computer screen tracking our location at the front of the cabin, the senator read a copy of the Wall Street Journal. Johnson had claimed an aisle seat and reported that he first read a story about off-shore oil drilling and then one about Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.
By the time we were descending, at 17,000 feet, he had switched to the New York Times, spending most of his time in the Sports and Arts sections.
We were wheels down at 2:17 p.m. local and parked with the engines off by 2:24 p.m.
After getting off the plane, Douglass said there was time for "one question," adding, "Then, we're making him leave. He's behind [schedule]."
Your pool, with the noise of the jet's engines in the background, quickly asked what two or three things Obama was hoping to learn on this mission.
"Well, I'm looking forward to seeing what the situation on the ground is," he said. "I want to, obviously, talk to the commanders and get a sense, both in Afghanistan and in Baghdad of, you know, what the most, ah, their biggest concerns are. And I want to thank our troops for the heroic work that they've been doing."
Then, the senator was asked whether he plans to deliver some tough talk to Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki about doing more to stand up the instruments of self-governance in their own nations.
"Well, you know, I'm more interested in listening than doing a lot of talking," he said. "And I think it is very important to recognize that I'm going over there as a U.S. senator. We have one president at a time, so it's the president's job to deliver those messages."
By 2:32 p.m., the motorcade was rolling. This one included two local police cars, three SUVs, a Honda Accord, a minivan equipped with lights and sirens and another local patrol car. We were off the DCA property by 2:36 p.m.
Your pool was in the Honda with Douglass. It was driven by Molly Buford, who works in Obama's senator office and also for the campaign.
The motorcade traveled I-395 to I-295 and then on to the Suitland Parkway, entering a northern entrance of Andrews Air Force Base at 2:57 p.m.
We passed several military helicopters and planes before arriving at 3:01 p.m. near an aircraft that had no markings, with the exception of an American flag on the tail. This was the plane that would transport the congressional delegation to their destination. A ground crew member told us it was a Boeing C-40C.
The senator greeted several military personnel waiting for him near the plane. He was carrying a laptop bag and had changed into some brown leather boots upon arrival in Washington.
The senator was also greeted by Mark Lippert, foreign policy advisor in his senate office. Douglass said he was the only member of Obama's staff traveling with him on the congressional delegation trip. Douglass later told your pool that Lippert had returned in the late spring from a tour of duty in Iraq as a naval reservist.
By 3:03 p.m., the senator was on the aircraft, having been saluted by a member of the military on his way aboard. At 3:09 p.m., the plane's door was closed. Four minutes later it was in motion and wheels up at 3:17 p.m., taking off to the south.
Later, Douglass confirmed that Sens. Jack Reed and Chuck Hagel were on the plane before our arrival. Your pool had not seen them at Andrews.
-- John McCormick, Chicago Tribune.
Recent Comments
(Page 1 of 3)Bob2:44PMJul 19th 2008
Nothing inspiring about a 1 term Junior senitor not no where near graduating into or near presidentcy...yawn...
Bob S.2:48PMJul 19th 2008
OOPS. SOMEONE FORGOT TO REPORT HOW MANY TIMES OBAMA USED THE BATHROOM. SURELY THAT MUST BE NEWSWORTHY, TOO.
Denise Williams3:02PMJul 19th 2008
Ruth2:16PMJul 19th 2008
obama TAKES A TRIP TO MAKE HIM QUALIFIED TO BE OUR NEXT PRESIDENT IS SUCH A JOKE.
MY OPINION IS THAT obama JUST WANTS A FREE VACATION
____________________________________________________
Yes, that HAS to be it! I know that Kuwait, Afganistan and Iraq are tops on MY list of travel destinations. Europe and the Caribbean are SO overrated...
Olisa3:02PMJul 19th 2008
It is amazing to me how uptight some people are. It is one thing to not want Obama to become President, but the way some people portray this Harvard graduate as though he were a nincompoop brings tears to my eyes. I supported Hilary Clinton for President because of Bill's legacy, but she lost. No thanks to a badly run campaign. Obama and his people have proven that America can do things with finesse again. I like them. And while I can understand that jealousy does creep into some of the posts here, I wish that the blatantly uncouth would just register to vote. And then shut up. They do more damage to themselves by showing how ignorant they are. And insisting on it. To buckfarack, if you actually read the book, you wouldn't act like part of a herd and isolate a sentence and run with it. And before you start swearing at me in your misplaced righteous anger, go to your local library, borrow and read the book.
Dee3:07PMJul 19th 2008
Re: CNN's coverage of the campaign (aka CORONATION) lately:
I used to respect Anderson Cooper...until he starting sipping some of that Obama Kool Aid...along with the rest of the crew at CNN.
Breaks my heart...
However...bless his heart...Lou Dobbs has abstained from the "free punch" and is still his own man. He doesn't hesitate to call a "spade a spade" (no pun intended) and has frequently slapped Obama down as arrogant and "who does he think he is...demanding that we all learn to speak Spanish in this country, etc?"
Right on...Lou. My man... :>)
Judy3:53PMJul 19th 2008
I cannot believe no one mentions our current President had no history of having any foreign policy experience. At least we know Barack can eaily learn knew things. I am still waiting for Bush to learn anything.
Stan Hawley4:02PMJul 19th 2008
I Wonder How Many Of His Terrorist Followers He Can Get To Put Down Their Guns For The Muslim Senator. You Can Attend Temple For Twenty Years, But You Are There Just To Find Out Who To enslave, Your Still A Muslim!
Bob S.4:11PMJul 19th 2008
OMG. Obama is so naive, he thinks he can learn all he needs to know about foreign affairs by making a quick trip--and there are people in this country who actually believe this trip will magically render him qualified to be president. Scary.
Bob Wilkinson4:20PMJul 19th 2008
Dee--Once again you prove my point that all the hecklers of Obama have not, and more than likeley, have no intentions of researching beyond Faux News. Once again I have to agree what the polls claim, and have claimed for years, that on the whole people that agree with the Democratic Phylosophys are, Generaly speaking, better educated than voters in other parties. Therefore I have to assume that Andersons opinions are better thought out than Dobbs who has never been known for his intellect.
Crystal4:31PMJul 19th 2008
Was I Not Supposed To Say That?
By Dave from PM (no last name lol)
The blogosphere is in a late Friday minor uproar, especially those worried that Obama may be the target of some unfriendly fire now that McCain may have possible exposed him to some of the same, TPM has the Reuters piece:
Let's everyone grab a paper bag and breathe in and out. Without the McCain comments, there was enough public information that an enterprising Al Qaeda agent intent on doing some mischief could have put two and two together. Are we really suggesting that Al Qaeda would prefer to attack Obama and throw the election to Hillary or the Republicans?
And if Obama gets hurt it's McCain's fault because he repeated what the entire world's press corp already knew? Color me skeptical.
Bob Wilkinson4:42PMJul 19th 2008
Steve Hawley-Bob S- and people like you everywhere!!! I do not believe that any of you have done indepth research and I don't believe you have read Obamas books. I don't believe you have the courage to look in depth at this man because you may come to conclusions that you don't embrace now and you are not the type of person that's large enough to admitt that you have been wrong. If any of you have FACTS please reveal them AND the sources Includeing all legitiment reffereces. [ please don't show your ignorance by calling any opinionated media as your referances-that's not research.] Take the dare and show us. And if you want to argue let's see if you can do it with out grade school put downs.
Bob Wilkinson4:48PMJul 19th 2008
Olisa--Thanks for the invitation to respond. I too have come to the conclusion that most of the negative responses are not made by people that can claim more than a grade school education and most definetly do not research the subjects they ridicule. Obamas books were recomended to me by a friend and I have to addmitt you cannot truly apreciate Obama until you read his books. His level of intellagence, his humility and his good intentions for people that do not belong to the 5% that make up the eletist group that now run our country. It's amazing to me that most of people that make all those ignorant and rude remarks are the very people his Philosophy and ententions are designed to help. Go figure??
Bob S.4:54PMJul 19th 2008
BOB WILKINsON: Obama's books are interesting, BUT MUST BE READ WITH A GRAIN OF SALT. Obama is a master self-promoter and, just because Obama wrote something, doesn't mean it's true. For example, In "Dreams From My Father" had the audacity to write more than 100 pages about action to remove asbestos from a Chicago South Side public housing project,giving himself credit for the removal. I reality, a group of residents and a local newspaper were working on the problem for years before Obama came along, played a very minor role, then left with the problem unsolved; Hazel Johnson (a member of the original group) and the newspaper (which did asbestos testing) deserve the credit for the eventual clean-up, not Obama. In any event, Obama wrote his books with his potential political future in mind. Accordingly, even though they are interesting, it should be remembered that they are instruments of self-promotion.
Bob S.5:06PMJul 19th 2008
BOB WILKINSON: By the way, I don't believe I'm ignorant. I am well-read and have better academic credentials than Obama, i.e., have more years of formal education and more degrees from comparable elite universities.
Bob5:55PMJul 19th 2008
Try reading more than just his books ..like ...www.dontvoteobama
....www.savagepolitics.com
....www.hcsfjm.com...
Tim6:15PMJul 19th 2008
What a crock!! Bush's successes have been characterized as failure. Obama's foreign policy as insightful.
We Americans have been so phenomenally blessed to have George Bush as President during these times. He is tough and kept us on the right track in spite of the waffling and weak assed position the Dems have tried to foist onto us. If the Dems had their way, we would have condemned in "no uncertain terms" the attacks on us by Osama, and we would certainly scolded Saddam for all the atrocities he has perpetrated. Then it would have been business as usual. No one happy and we Americans weaker.
George had the balls and the vision to do something. What George Sr. and Bill Clinton should have done during their twelve years of the presidency, but never did.
Barack Obama will turn it into a negotiating session, the Iranians will become nuclear, the Israelies will nuke Iran, and off we go into WWIII.
Get smart and vote for John McCain, or dig your fallout shelter. You would have to be blind not to see this obvious scenario unfolding right before your eyes.
speak6:53PMJul 19th 2008
Bob S.
Even though you claim to have more years of formal education and more degrees, you sound like an extremely uneducated person. Please humor us and tell us about your "better academic credentials" that you have more than Obama. Please print them on the blog and give us the references in order to prove their authenticity. I think you are just talk and I don't believe you are even close to 1/64 of Obama's brilliance. I think you are jealous of Obama and you definitely want to be where he is now, that is, riding high to the White House. Bob S., you will never be like Obama and that's killing you.
Bob S., have you written any book like Obama? What are you waiting for? When does it become a crime for one to write a book with potential political future in mind? What is wrong with one promoting oneself in aspiration for a higher office? Bob S., for you to take these above concepts as negative, proves to me that you are not an educated person and your hatredness toward Obama, has clouded what amount of brain matter you have left in your brain.
Bob S., Obama worked in the projects - did you? Obama made contributions in his community - did you?
Bob S., it is not because some nin-com-poops said Obama has no experience therefore he hasn't - far from it and you as a so-called "educated person with more degrees than Obama"is supposed to know that. Why do you allow hate to stop you from speaking the truth?
Obama already knows about foreign affairs and it is not the trip that is going to formulate that - Obama is well read and he has all the credentials to take upon any issue that he is confronted with.
Bob S., I would advice you to use your so-called what ever you claim to have in terms of education, and make use of them for the benefit of this country and its peoples.
laura m6:56PMJul 19th 2008
wow, TC, the republicans seem to be after you today. and PUMA too. you are one hard worker. anyone who thinks a bush-hugger would be better off with McCain hasn't
asked themselves whether they are better off today with these policy "vows" to GET BIN LADEN/settle the siuation in iraq. just maybe they missed economic advisor phil gramm calling them whiners for trying to
make ends meet. yes, he was tossed under the straight talk bus. He should have been fired! just think, had
gramm not given that public statement to the wall street journal, we might have had him as a potential
secretary of the treasury! he was being considered for that position by the McCain side.
VOTE-COUNTRY-NOT-PARTY7:07PMJul 19th 2008
FOR SALE - AMERICAN PRESIDENCY!
How about if we elect a President the old fashioned way --- through fair and honest elections, based upon the candidate's actual patriotism, experience, judgment, and service to country --- instead of who is more of a showman, or who can raise more money --- and, therefore, buy the Presidency (like Barack Hussein Obama did in the primaries) --- and is trying to do in the general election.
Where did Obama’s money come from? How much came from his terrorists friends and foreign countries?
Why is he in Europe? Is he getting more money? They can’t vote for President of the U.S.
Why won’t he participate in town hall meetings with
“Americans”?
How much did this trip cost? What is this trip costing the American Enonomy? Why does he need 300 advisors? Do they put a piece in his ear and feed his speech to him?
McCain has been over there eight times --- the biased media did not report it --- they certainly did no go with him.
Obama is not our president!
I’m voting for John McCain.
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Bush on Georgian conflictPresident Bush makes a statement on Georgia during his visit to CIA Headquarters in Langley, Virginia. (August 14) | |
Pastor won't play 'gotcha'Pastor Rick Warren won't play 'gotcha' with the presidential candidates this weekend at his forum. (August 14) | |
McCain criticizes PutinSen. John McCain discusses the Russia-Georgia conflict at the Aspen Institute. (August 14) | |
Gearing up for the conventionsCNN Political Editor Mark Preston explains why Clinton is still a winner, and why some RNC members are staying home. (August 14) | |
Strategy SessionThe Situation Room Strategy Session. CNN's Wolf Blitzer discusses the Edwards affair. (August 15) | |
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buckfarack2:29PMJul 19th 2008
who cares, hes not the president, he shouldnt even be in the middle east. " i will stand with the muslims should the political winds shift in an ugly direction", by barack hussein obama. is he going to explain this quote from his book to the israelies ? as a matter of fact, why dont you explain that t.c. or c. jenkins know it all. busted.......obama is a muslim.