The New York Observer, May 1st, 2007
It has been over 45 years since John F. Kennedy campaigned against Richard Nixon, an inveterate anticommunist with impressive foreign-policy credentials, on the âmissile gap.â
Contending that the Eisenhower administration had left America vulnerable to Soviet military expansion and that new leadership was needed to set a course for the future, John Kennedyâa thinly experienced and boyish figureâdefeated the sitting Vice President.
It has taken over four decades, but the time may once again have come for the Democratic Party to run on defense and foreign policy. They have good reason to do so.
With only a quarter of Americans approving of President George W. Bushâs handling of the Iraq War and a healthy majority (56 to 37 percent) favoring the Democratic troop-deadline approach over Mr. Bushâs open-ended commitment in the latest NBC poll, Democrats have a receptive audience.
Democratic Presidential candidates now routinely make the argument that Mr. Bushâs Iraq policy has diverted us from needed security tasks and weakened Americaâs international standing.
Last week, Senator Hillary Clinton said: âThe plain truth is that this administration has done too little to protect our ports, make our mass transit safer and protect our cities. They have isolated us in the world and have let Al Qaeda regroup.â Senator Barack Obama frequently criticizes the Bush administration for skimping on the military and says he supports expansion of the armed forces. And at the Democratic candidate debate last week, the top-tier contenders vied to show who could be the most aggressive in laying out a response to a hypothetical nuclear attack. All thatâs missing is a catchy phrase like âsecurity gapâ to encapsulate the Democratsâ argument.
Republicans, beset by the overwhelming public opposition to the Iraq Warânot to mention Russiaâs descent into fascism and the threat of unchecked North Korean and Iranian nuclearizationâfind themselves at a loss to identify any significant foreign-policy success. The President was actually reduced to turning to Bill Clintonâs U.N. ambassador (and current Presidential candidate) Bill Richardson earlier this month to meet with North Korea and seek the return of U.S. servicemenâs remains. Next page >