The Hypocrisy of the Left – A General Crisis

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Making Sense, by Michael Reagan

Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who until today was the leader of U.S, and NATO forces in Afghanistan, has resigned in the wake of derogatory comments made by the general and his staff during an interview with Rolling Stone magazine.

Cartoon by Daryl Cagle - msnbc.com (click to reprint)
Cartoon by Daryl Cagle – msnbc.com (click to reprint)

One can only guess at this point why the general chose to publicly disclose his feelings on an array of topics in an on-the-record capacity to a journalist associated with this particular magazine, not one generally associated with thought-provoking foreign policy pieces. The president chose wisely in quickly replacing Gen. McChrystal with someone with impeccable credentials and a record of accomplishing military objectives that at first glance may seem to be unobtainable.

You may remember this man as Gen. David Petraeus, the former commander of forces in Iraq who crafted, implemented and led the famous surge that ultimately saved countless American and Iraqi lives. Interestingly, this is the same David Petraeus who faced the wrath of the uber-progressive MoveOn.org during that same timeframe. MoveOn launched a controversial ad entitled “Petraeus Betray Us,” which drew the wrath of a majority of Americans who felt it wholly inappropriate to attack a United States general who was in the field leading American personnel into battle. At the time, 72 sitting United States senators agreed.

On September 20, 2007, Senator John Cornyn of Texas (R) offered Senate Amendment 2934, which set out to: “express the sense of the Senate that General David H. Petraeus, Commanding General, Multi-National Force-Iraq, deserves the full support of the Senate and strongly condemn personal attacks on the honor and integrity of General Petraeus and all members of the United States Armed Forces.” The measure passed overwhelmingly with 72 “yeas” to 25 “nays” and 3 not voting.

It will not surprise many of you to see the likes of Hillary Clinton, Chuck Schumer or Harry Reid voting against a measure that supported the leader of our armed forces engaged in battle in favor of a progressive grassroots organization. But what should concern many of us is that then-Sen. Obama decided to seek political refuge by not casting a vote. Then-Sen. Joe Biden did the same.

Gen. McChrystal, despite his proud military record, exercised extremely poor judgment in allowing such dismissing comments about the Obama administration to be aired in a public forum. The president’s choice to replace him is an understandable decision.

Less understandable is how President Obama can demand a respect he has been inconsistent in offering to others. In 2007, he was unwilling to stand up to the liberal elements of his party in defense of Gen. Petraeus. As he now calls on that same general to rescue him from the political firestorm flowing today and continue the surge in Afghanistan, I express only the greatest admiration for the honor and integrity of David Petraeus.

The war in Afghanistan stands at a crucial point as more American forces pour into the region. While I have nothing but confidence in Gen. Petraeus, the resignation of Gen. McChrystal is an unfortunate loss, and one symptomatic of the tension between the civilian and military dimensions of this effort. As President Obama and Gen. Petraeus move foward in this conflict, I hope the president will begin to take proactive steps to reconcile this divide, listen to the counsel of generals in the field, and increase coordination between all aspects of the fight in Afghanistan. That country, and ours, can afford no less.

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Mike Reagan, the elder son of the late President Ronald Reagan, is spokesperson for The Reagan PAC (www.thereaganpac.com) and chairman and president of The Reagan Legacy Foundation (www.reaganlegacyfoundation.org). Look for Mike’s books and other information at www.Reagan.com. E-mail comments to [email protected].

©2010 Mike Reagan. If you’re not a paying subscriber to our service, you must contact us to print or Web post this column. Mike’s column is distributed exclusively by: Cagle Cartoons, Inc., newspaper syndicate. For info contact Cari Dawson Bartley. E-mail [email protected], (800) 696-7561.


Comments

11 responses to “The Hypocrisy of the Left – A General Crisis”

  1. Murray Avatar
    Murray

    This is well put. The McCrystal firing is not a victory for the president. He did what he had to do once the damage was revealed, but the fact that there is that much contempt for the president by the military is a deep problem.

    Personally, I think we really need to rethink what we are doing in Aphganistan, and maybe even get out.

  2. Amilam Avatar
    Amilam

    Wow, I had forgotten the whole red herring which was the moveon.org ad.

    Senator Franken put it wonderfully: "It is, of course, ridiculous that the United States Senate spent a day debating and voting on a resolution condemning an advertisement while our troops remained in Iraq, fighting a war with no end."

    I mean, why not pass an amendment every time Beck or Limbaugh open their copious pie holes with another political smear? The amendment was nothing but feigned outrage from the right and another attempt to stifle any dissent with being unpatriotic. It was a gross abuse of what the founding fathers imagined the federal process to be. The fact that so many Democratic senators voted for the bill should serve to remind just how spineless the party is.

  3. Justin Kredible Avatar
    Justin Kredible

    Rest easy, me buckos…..Barack Hussein "Henpecked Tarballs" Obamadinajad is your Commander-on-the-cheap……….How much more chaos, crap, crisis, and corruption are you willing to endure??? Just the incessant whistled esses are enough cause for impeachment.

    Amilam: list some 'political smears' of Limbaugh and Beck. Smart money says you can't. Why not pass an amendment everytime The Great Reneger screws the USA? That would keep Congress fully occupied and out of our lives………………The president from hell is in Canada……suggest he spend the remainder of his life there………………

  4. James Avatar
    James

    While the Moveon.org ad campaign was inappropriate, the group is a privately funded group entitled to the free speech rights of its donors and membership. While other private citizens negative response to moveon was similarly protected it was inappropriate, unnecessary, and fairly Orwellian for the congress to come to Petraus's defense.

    On the other hand, McCrystal is a US General, a role in which he must temper his free speech rights.

    Truth be told, I'm disappointed Obama abstained rather than voted Nay on the Moveon issue.

  5. Amilam Avatar
    Amilam

    "Amilam: list some ‘political smears’ of Limbaugh and Beck. Smart money says you can’t. "

    This was about the only part of JK's post I understood, the rest was so riddled with spelling mistakes / puns (I genuinely can't tell in some parts) and wingnut kool aid as to be indecipherable. However, if you're really so dense as to believe I can't provide political smears from those two clowns I'm only too happy to oblige:

    http://mediamatters.org/research/201006210060 http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/201006250009 http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/201006210029 http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/201006170037

    Now I mainly stuck to thoroughly disproved/insane conspiracy theories. If I was going by the same standard as the moveon.org standard the Dems could have an amendment for every personal attack on the President (a smear last I checked). 5 seconds from either of these two knuckle draggers would be sufficient. Still, JK should breath easy as the odds that he has anything smart to lose, let alone smart money, is pretty negligible.

  6. joe jay Avatar
    joe jay

    just incredible is a retarded moron looking at the world through the wrong end of a telescope

  7. geoff Avatar

    And who owns factcheck.org that is the whole and sole truthfinder in these articles?

    check below.

    http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20081

    Hey but its no conspiracy theory. It is a fact of factcheck.org

    check the bottom of the below link.
    http://whois.domaintools.com/factcheck.org

    But thats that.

  8. geoff Avatar

    The icing on the cake is this

    http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=David_

    No wonder we see a lot of spin all around here.

    🙂

    Enjoy.

  9. Amilam Avatar
    Amilam

    I couldn't agree more with James. It's kind of amazing that we have AM thugs like Limbaugh and his Ditto heads crying every time the White House criticizes their outrageous smears and flat out lies on the grounds that the Administration shouldn't be criticizing private citizens. Of course, they were the primary cheerleaders of the preposterous moveon.org amendment. I'm willing to bet that most of our friends on the right here still don't see the double standard.

  10. dEd Grimley Avatar
    dEd Grimley

    Didja know? Hussein is a fairly common name in the world. The president, having a father who was once Muslim and later renounced that faith, naming him "Hussein" actually kinda makes a lot of sense.

    Does anyone remember Joseph Goebbels? I think that everyone with the name "Joe" (Present commentators excluded) should have their backgrounds thoroughly examined, and have them tied to Nazis at every possible opportunity. Because I hate things that are childish and obnoxious.

  11. Good Life Avatar
    Good Life

    What would be good is if we would return to the "equal time" and "fairness" doctrines that were done away with in the 'deregulation" era because broadcasters (like oil, banks, etc.) could regulate themselves.

    What most Americans don't know is the stations don't own the airwaves. The radio spectrum belongs to the people and the users are to serve the public good. (Communications Act of 1936) During the '60's and 90's this fact was ignored in favor of business profits.

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