If nothing changes, then nothing changes.

And the NO CHANGE, cost the Dems heavily in the 2010 election.

It's unforeseen what will happen in this one. Can the Republicans run
someone so scary the Republicans can't get votes? My bet is the Convention
will put Jeb Bush in, to pull their blind  disaffected factions together
for the Bush brand label.

Please note, this is 2 years old, the war in Libya has come and gone,
Helen didn't even have a glimmer of it then. At least the wars Obama has
started, so far, seem to be shorter, if one is into waging wars in
sovereign nations for regime change and the resources the Corporations
that fund our elections want.

Scott

https://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/02/08-10

Published on Monday, February 8, 2010 by The Albany Times-Union (New York)
Obama, The War President
by Helen Thomas
President Barack Obama does have a foreign policy. It's called war.

The President has not defined any real difference between his hawkish
approach to international issues and that of his predecessor, former
President George W. Bush.

Where's the change we can believe in?

Bush left a legacy of two wars, neither of which was ever fully explained
or justified. Obama has merely picked up the sword that Bush left behind
in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In the struggle against terrorism, one might say, "Who cares?"

One group that cares consists of Americans who follow the rules and think
we should honor all the treaties we have promoted and signed over the
years.

The President gave short shrift to foreign policy in his State of the
Union address, mentioning neither the lives lost nor the cost of the
global hostilities that the U.S. has involved itself in. He also didn't
mention U.S. policies in the Middle East, though those are the root cause
of many of our problems.

While U.S. special envoy George Mitchell has a hopeful outlook for the
resumption of the stalemated talks between the Israelis and Palestinians
after a year of trying, Obama seems to have temporarily thrown in the
towel.

Obama said he was keeping his promise to leave Iraq by the end of August.

Meanwhile, frequent suicide bombings continue in that beleaguered country.

Afghanistan is a different story. U.S. forces there are involved in
manhunts of al-Qaida and Taliban leaders. But the cost in civilian life is
heavy when drones are used and whole families have been wiped out to get
one suspected leader.

The U.S. seems to have convinced the governments of Pakistan and
Afghanistan that it's their war too. The Washington Post said the loss of
Hakimullah Mehsud has dealt a fatal blow to his followers.

The U.S. military web has spread to Yemen, where American intelligence
teams have joined Yemeni troops in planning missions against al-Qaida
elements. Scores have been killed there.

Then there's the ramped-up U.S. saber-rattling toward Iran.

In his speech, Obama warned Iran of "consequences" if it didn't play ball
and co-operate on nuclear inspections. It's unclear whether those
consequences are of the financial variety or of a pre-emptive military
strike by the U.S. or Israel.

All this comes at a time when the U.S. has bolstered its naval presence in
the Persian Gulf and the neo-conservatives are calling for "regime change"
in Iran.

But neo-con Robert Kagan, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment,
sees the possibility of peaceful regime change in Iran. Organic regime
change could change the Iranian equation, Kagan concludes in a Washington
Post article.

Iran, reacting to Western pressure or from fear of an attack, recently
offered to send its uranium abroad for enrichment for industrial use.

There are new tensions in other parts of the world. China is upset with
the U.S. $6 billion-plus arms sale to its nemesis, Taiwan. China's also
irked at Google for its belated push-back against Chinese hacking into
Google's G-mail accounts.

So while the President's Democratic base of support mutters about his
abandonment of health reform and immigration reform, Obama can take solace
in support from the Republican Party whenever he flexes U.S. military
muscle.

And so this president takes his place among other U.S. chief executives
who have sought the glory of leading the nation in military conflict. He
has attained the desired status of "War President."
© 2010 Albany Times-Union
Helen Thomas

Helen Thomas is an American author and former news service reporter,
member of the White House Press Corps and columnist. She worked for the
United Press International (UPI) for 57 years, first as a correspondent,
and later as White House bureau chief. She was an opinion columnist for
Hearst Newspapers from 2000 to 2010, writing on national affairs and the
White House. Among other books she is the author of Front Row at The White
House: My Life and Times.









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