Monday, July 13, 2009

Liz Cheney on Obama

h/t Ace of Spades

Wall Street Journal:

Obama Rewrites the Cold War
The President has a duty to stand up to the lies of our enemies.
By LIZ CHENEY

There are two different versions of the story of the end of the Cold War: the Russian version, and the truth. President Barack Obama endorsed the Russian version in Moscow last week.

Speaking to a group of students, our president explained it this way: "The American and Soviet armies were still massed in Europe, trained and ready to fight. The ideological trenches of the last century were roughly in place. Competition in everything from astrophysics to athletics was treated as a zero-sum game. If one person won, then the other person had to lose. And then within a few short years, the world as it was ceased to be. Make no mistake: This change did not come from any one nation. The Cold War reached a conclusion because of the actions of many nations over many years, and because the people of Russia and Eastern Europe stood up and decided that its end would be peaceful."

The truth, of course, is that the Soviets ran a brutal, authoritarian regime. The KGB killed their opponents or dragged them off to the Gulag. There was no free press, no freedom of speech, no freedom of worship, no freedom of any kind. The basis of the Cold War was not "competition in astrophysics and athletics." It was a global battle between tyranny and freedom. The Soviet "sphere of influence" was delineated by walls and barbed wire and tanks and secret police to prevent people from escaping. America was an unmatched force for good in the world during the Cold War. The Soviets were not. The Cold War ended not because the Soviets decided it should but because they were no match for the forces of freedom and the commitment of free nations to defend liberty and defeat Communism.

It is irresponsible for an American president to go to Moscow and tell a room full of young Russians less than the truth about how the Cold War ended. One wonders whether this was just an attempt to push "reset" -- or maybe to curry favor. Perhaps, most concerning of all, Mr. Obama believes what he said.

Mr. Obama's method for pushing reset around the world is becoming clearer with each foreign trip. He proclaims moral equivalence between the U.S. and our adversaries, he readily accepts a false historical narrative, and he refuses to stand up against anti-American lies.

The approach was evident in his speech in Moscow and in his speech in Cairo last month. In Cairo, he asserted there was some sort of equivalence between American support for the 1953 coup in Iran and the evil that the Iranian mullahs have done in the world since 1979. On an earlier trip to Mexico City, the president listened to an extended anti-American screed by Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega and then let the lies stand by responding only with, "I'm grateful that President Ortega did not blame me for the things that occurred when I was 3 months old."

Asked at a NATO meeting in France in April whether he believed in American exceptionalism, the president said, "I believe in American Exceptionalism just as I suspect that the Brits believe in British exceptionalism and the Greeks believe in Greek exceptionalism." In other words, not so much.

The Obama administration does seem to believe in another kind of exceptionalism -- Obama exceptionalism. "We have the best brand on Earth: the Obama brand," one Obama handler has said. What they don't seem to realize is that once you're president, your brand is America, and the American people expect you to defend us against lies, not embrace or ignore them. We also expect you to know your history.

Mr. Obama has become fond of saying, as he did in Russia again last week, that American nuclear disarmament will encourage the North Koreans and the Iranians to give up their nuclear ambitions. Does he really believe that the North Koreans and the Iranians are simply waiting for America to cut funds for missile defense and reduce our strategic nuclear stockpile before they halt their weapons programs?

The White House ought to take a lesson from President Harry Truman. In April, 1950, Truman signed National Security Council report 68 (NSC-68). One of the foundational documents of America's Cold War strategy, NSC-68 explains the danger of disarming America in the hope of appeasing our enemies. "No people in history," it reads, "have preserved their freedom who thought that by not being strong enough to protect themselves they might prove inoffensive to their enemies."

Perhaps Mr. Obama thinks he is making America inoffensive to our enemies. In reality, he is emboldening them and weakening us. America can be disarmed literally -- by cutting our weapons systems and our defensive capabilities -- as Mr. Obama has agreed to do. We can also be disarmed morally by a president who spreads false narratives about our history or who
accepts, even if by his silence, our enemies' lies about us.

11 comments:

maccusgermanis said...

Er, um, actually I don't see a big revision in the intial quote. It may underplay our contribution to the demise of the the Soviet bloc, but would the architects of our diplomacy, and even subterfuge, of the time want things any other way. We didn't defeat the Soviet Union without help from the peoples of Eastern Europe. Even though, as a beacon of freedom, we had to be prepared to act without them, we did in fact not have to resort to such preparations.

Neverthless, I only object to the selection of this particular quote, as illustrative of this presidents lackluster rhetoric in favor of freedom. I do find him lacking in commitment to the American values of individual liberty, that we did successfully convince large numbers of Eatern Europeans to adopt.

maccusgermanis said...

Eastern, even

Total said...

Wow, if you guys don't like Obama's plan, you surely won't like Britain's:

"The UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) should assist Russia in its efforts to modernise and professionalise its armed forces, a new report by the House of Commons Defence Select Committee has argued."


http://www.janes.com/news/defence/triservice/jdw/jdw090713_1_n.shtml

When will these morons learn that the Russians don't think or percieve the world the way the West does and never will?

Anonymous said...

If he had mentioned the Polish solidarity movement, the velvet revolution, JP II, Thatcher and even Yeltsin, I would have agreed with you.

However, he intimated it was the "Soviets" themselves that decided to "give up" their human-hating, murderous designs on Eastern Europe. NOT SO. JUST NOT SO.
And it is starting again. Watch Georgia over the next six months.

We will see if the murderous thugs subjugate her population.

God help Poland and the Czech Republic if they are successful.

'Cos we will be about as helpful as tits on a bull. (Love that line - learned it in Texas.)

Ro




Ro

Pastorius said...

I kind of agree with Macus here, but I do think when discussing the Cold War, it is an unfair depiction of history to not name Reagan, Thatcher, Lech Walesa, and Pope JPII.

Putin may not want to remember those people because their policies led to defeat in his eyes.

Check out this post I wrote on Putin several years back:

In 2000, Vladimir Putin sat down with three journalists who interviewed him and used the transcripts verbatim to construct a biography of his life. Here are a few excerpts from that session:
Putin on his mission in life — “My historical mission,” he insisted, is to stop “the collapse of the USSR” (p. 139). To do this, he vowed to “consolidate the armed forces, the Interior Ministry, and the FSB [the successor to the KGB, the “secret police” of the Soviet Union]” (p. 140). “If I can help save Russia from collapse, then I’ll have something to be proud of” (p. 204).

On his rise from spy to president — “In the Kremlin, I have a different position. Nobody controls me here. I control everybody else” (p. 131).

On the czars — “[F]rom the very beginning, Russia was created as a supercentralized state. That’s practically laid down in its genetic code, its traditions, and the mentality of its people,” said Putin, adding: “In certain periods of time . . . in a certain place . . . under certain conditions . . . monarchy has played and continues to this day to play a positive role. . . . The monarch doesn’t have to worry about whether or not he will be elected, or about petty political interests, or about how to influence the electorate. He can think about the destiny of the people and not become distracted with trivialities” (p. 186).
I think Vlad has made it pretty clear what his intentions are.

http://astuteblogger.blogspot.com/search?q=putin+biography

Anonymous said...

I agree, Pastorius. And just why is our pres giving him "historical" cover to do it??

Rhetorical question.

Ro

nunya said...

Yeah, she could have mentioned that communism has to fail, because it's an inherently parasitic ideology which is predicated on a death-wish, which not only cannibalizes once it kills off the class enemy, but doesn't even make sense in theory. It's like the underwear gnomes:

1) Vastly expand governmental power to regulate every aspect of life and take away all individual determinism, resulting in an enormous, ridiculously powerful, inherently tyrannical state.

2) _______________

3) Worker's paradise, power to the little guy.

What ultimately destroyed the USSR was that we isolated them, and since parasitic ideologies like communism and Islam can't survive without others to parasitize, and cannibalize in their absence, it naturally fell apart. Reagan certainly sped it along by supporting dissidents, religion, oil, and Star Wars.

Pastorius said...

Jdamn,
Exactly.

Well put.

Vladtepesblog.com said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Vladtepesblog.com said...

n case anyone is not familiar with jdamn's reference: underpants gnomes

Pastorius said...

Yeah, I didn't get her underpants gnomes comment, cuz I hadn't seen it, but I generally understood the idea.

Actually Underpants Gnomes is a better phrase than Nanny State, in my book.