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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

McCain Answers the 3AM Phone Call

Granted it was a Hillary Clinton commercial, after Russia invaded Georgia, many of us thought about that spot that asks who do you want answering the phone at Three AM. If one thing was proved in the past week, at least out of the major party candidates for president, John McCain is that person.

The Russian invasion of Georgia is actually a vindication of what Senator McCain had been saying about Putin all along, "I look into his soul and see K-G-B." His statements about the crisis show a true understanding of the situation, while Obama's seemed more like an off-the-shelf announcement, where you could have substituted another country's name for Russia and it would still work:



LAMBRO: Savvy foresight and insight COMMENTARY

When President Bush first met Russian President Vladimir Putin, he looked into his eyes and said he could trust him.

About the same time, John McCain said, "when I look into his eyes, I see a K, a G and a B" - the acronym of the Soviet Union's Stalinist secret police for whom torture and murder was a form of recreation.

Mr. McCain never trusted Mr. Putin. He believed the former KGB agent neither supported nor accepted the independence movement that swept Eastern Europe when the Evil Empire fell apart and ended up on the ash heap of history. When others were supporting Mr. Putin's bid for membership in the exclusive G-8 club of economic powers, Mr. McCain opposed it.

Events have proven Mr. McCain right from the beginning. Mr. Putin has crushed dissent in Russia, dismantled a free press, thrown corporate executives in prison on trumped-up state charges, took control of the country's oil and gas industry, and eliminated anyone who got in his way. Now he seems bent on reconstructing the old Soviet Union through military might.

Last week he sent troops, tanks and bombers into neighboring Georgia (an ancient country seized by the Red Army in 1922) on the preposterous pretext of saving Ossetia, a breakaway province where Georgia's army was attempting to quell a separatist uprising.

Before the weekend was over, Mr. Putin had sent Russian forces, bearing the old Soviet Union flag, into the Abkhazia region, and then deeper into Georgia, bombing cities and towns (2,000 were killed in South Ossetia alone) and instituting a naval blockade on Georgia's Black Sea coastline.

By Tuesday, Georgian officials feared the Russian army was moving toward Tbilisi, its capital, threatening to topple the government. Then in a deal being negotiated by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, both sides agreed to pull back their troops, leaving the Russians occupying the two disputed provinces as so-called "peacekeepers" - an untenable situation that gives Russia defacto control over sovereign Georgian territory.

There is little doubt now, if there ever was, who is running Russia, and it isn't the figurehead President Dmitry Medvedev. Prime Minister Putin has taken control of the military invasion as its commander in chief.

Eastern European countries were left wondering if they were Russia's next target. European leaders faced their deadliest crisis since the Cold War.

Mr. Bush harshly condemned the attack on the pro-American nation. Administration officials said it marked a return to Soviet-style aggression.

But here at home, all eyes were on Mr. McCain and Barack Obama to see how they would respond to the first major foreign policy crisis of the 2008 presidential election. This was a test of their judgment and foreign policy acumen, the equivalent of the hypothetical 3 a.m. White House phone call Hillary Clinton raised when she attacked the freshman senator's inexperience. Early in the crisis, the contrast between how the two men responded couldn't have been sharper.

Mr. McCain laid out a preliminary response Saturday, supporting the United States, European Union and NATO "acting together by sending a delegation to the region to broker a cease-fire." He backed a declaration by Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania that "aggression against a small country in Europe will not be passed over in silence or with meaningless statements equating the victims with the victimizers."

On Monday, he provided a much more detailed response:

c NATO's North Atlantic Council should "convene in emergency session to demand a cease-fire" and begin discussions on an international peacekeeping force in South Ossetia.

c The U.S. secretary of state should begin high-level talks in Europe for a common Euro-Atlantic posture, plus an emergency meeting with the G-7 foreign ministers.

c There should be immediate consultations with Ukraine and other countries in the region to take steps to "secure their continued independence."

Mr. Obama, vacationing in Hawaii, was slow on the uptake, issuing a very perfunctory statement that sent a signal of impotency in the face of a high-stakes foreign policy crisis in which two countries were at war with one another in Europe.

"I strongly condemn the outbreak of violence in Georgia and urge an immediate end to armed conflict," he said in a statement. He urged Georgia and Russia "to show restraint" and "avoid an escalation to full-scale war."

But Russia had already taken considerable territory. Events had moved beyond Mr. Obama's initial statement during the weekend.

Defense and political analysts expressed disappointment with Mr. Obama's slowness to grasp the full range of the crisis, but praised Mr. McCain, who had made numerous trips to Georgia, for his understanding of the crisis.

"The Obama campaign has had zero policy prescriptions for dealing with the most serious global crisis since the Iraq war," Ariel Cohen, Heritage Foundation senior research fellow in Russian and Eurasian Studies, told me. "It made [Obama] look like a deer caught in the headlights. The McCain campaign was way ahead of him by advocating a serious and multi-layered global diplomatic response."

"McCain certainly impresses me with the way he has handled it," said Michael O'Hanlon, a senior defense and foreign policy analyst at the Brookings Institution who supported Hillary Clinton. "It vindicates the somewhat tougher line toward the Russians that he has advocated. McCain is the one who has distinguished himself here," he told me.

If this was the first real foreign policy test of the presidential campaign, the score right now is McCain 10 and Obama 0.

Donald Lambro, chief political correspondent of The Washington Times, is a nationally syndicated columnist.

2 comments:

Melville said...

We'd better get tough with Russia. At this time in history they are laughing at the U.S. and Western Europe, thinking we are spineless and too worried about what people think of us--too PC. The Russian people believe that their leader, Putin, is divinely placed in his position by God, and that Russians have a God-given right to reclaim their empire.

Our future president will need to do more than negotiate with Russia. Russia will have no respect for Obama and his Marxism. Russia does not want peace or believe in it.

Anonymous said...

Obama would stand idly by just like FDR did while Hitler rolled over every country in Europe. And he wouldn't have Stalin to get in bed with to make going to war palatable to the Lefties (our alliance with Stalin was the last time the Left supported the US going to war, btw), not that I can imagine Obama ever standing up for democracy anyway.

Mark Steyn paints a very sad picture of Russia, which makes it pretty understandable how they could just let Putin dissolve freedom of speech, knock out every political check and balance and weaken state's rights one after another. 70% of all pregnancies in Russia are aborted, so the general morale is very low, as is the general vision of the Russian future. Russia has a sub-Saharan-scale AIDS epidemic, drug use is way up, and men have an average life span of 58.9. 58.9, not a typo. Women have a life span comparable to Western countries, but due to AIDS, alchoholism, heart disease, antibiotic-resistant strains of TB, and chronic depression men are dropping like flies. And the only provinces which are reproducing at even replacement rate are ... you guessed it: ISLAMIC. No wonder Putin negotiates with Ahmedinejad and enables Chechen terrorists who take little girls hostage and rape them while they're in school.

And Madeleine Albreight ate Putin up with a spoon.