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Dr. Walid Phares
Last Advice Before Election Day:
Vote for National Survival
October 29, 2008
In short, the financial drama that we’ve been living
through is only the tip of the iceberg in terms of an attack against
America. As I argued in previous writings, the first volley was OPEC’s
driving the prices at the pumps as high as needed to crack our economic
resilience. The hard core (and ideological) oil-producing regimes have been
trying to affect the minds of millions of Americans in the same way al
Qaeda’s propagandists did with the upset Spanish voters in March 2004.
Today OPEC launched its second offensive – possibly its last before
election day - to reduce petrol production as prices fell very low.
After hitting US citizens with an economic meltdown, it wants to smack
them with a goods shortage crisis to force them into making the ultimate
decision: jump into another realm. The current economically-induced
crisis is only a treatment to provoke a regime change in America. As odd
as it is, the forces pushing for the change "they need” have set
the US Presidential election as a mechanism to morph this democracy into
the uncharted future that awaits it, if the polls are on target.
Today Americans are readying, some have already begun, to elect a new
President. This testimony I am putting forth aims at explaining my
vision of this electoral benchmark in view of future developments,
beyond November 4th, the next four to eight years and
throughout the first part of the twenty-first century. This vote, more
than any previous ones, can transform America’s destiny radically, and
with it, the future of many nations, particularly those civil societies
suffering from oppression around the world.
Most likely my analysis will be reviewed by a few thousand faithful
readers. It is not sent out to influence the outcome of the election for
it is too small in a universe of extremely powerful winds driving the
electorate, on both sides of the debate. The arguments I am advancing in
this piece are the least visible in the agendas of both camps, at least
in the next few days. But in the next decade and perhaps as early as the
next few years or even months, historians and citizens will reexamine
the dimensions of this discussion of the overarching grave menace
hovering over US national security. This is why, as a scholar studying
conflicts, I am writing about this particular election.
As an academic and counterterrorism expert, I do not get involved in
partisan and strictly political processes. But as in 2004’s Presidential
election, this week’s voting choice will affect the current and future
national defense and survival of this country. Hence it is my duty as a
citizen with knowledge in this field to share my views and projections
with fellow citizens: For the choices given to voters are dramatically
opposed in terms of defining the direction in which this country will
move to defend its democracy and freedom around the world.
The United States’ Presidency is endowed with powers that can impact
global history in addition to the evolution of America as a democracy
and as a nation. In this era of confrontation with the global Jihadi
threats and of proliferation of catastrophic weapons, the direction
selected by the next US President will affect not only this generation
but the next one as well. Hence, regardless of the voting results on the
4th and beyond, it is important to testify beforehand in
writing, so that future readers would draw the lessons when confronted
with similar choices. Therefore, my words will be rough and direct.
The National Security Experience
The US primaries produced two leaders and their running mates. With the
utmost respect to their personal histories, sacrifices and achievements,
are these three men and one woman the ultimate choice that could have
been given to Americans? Their supporters feel it is the case while many
others, including the partisans of those who were defeated in the
parties’ primaries, claim otherwise. In my realm of study and
concentration the question is different, simply because I believe
national survival trumps everything else, in these times of world
threats.
I frame it as follows: are the four contending politicians as aware of
the enemy as the leaders of the enemy are aware of America’s weaknesses
and resources? We will see. But I argue that we’ve seen US Presidents
learning on the job, including the current president. On the evening of
September 10, 2001, President George W Bush knew much less than Senators
McCain and Obama on the evening of November 3, 2008; yet he confronted
the country’s enemies for seven years while learning on the job.
Today, the average citizen’s instincts know more about the threat we’re
facing than the combined advisors of Presidents Clinton and Bush before
the War on Terror, as per the 9/11 Commission findings. So based on
their records, speeches, length of service and publications regarding
the national threat, one can project that the four leaders America has
to consider for the two top offices would be ranked as follows: Senator
John McCain comes first, Senator Joe Biden comes second and Senator
Barack Obama and Governor Sarah Palin come equally third. This ranking
is quantitative and verifiable. Based on a simple examination of past
decades regarding McCain and Biden, and years regarding Obama and Palin,
the strict "experience factor” in matters of war and peace, national
security and defense, undoubtedly among the four, McCain would be the
top man for the job, followed by Biden.
Hence since the Senator from Arizona has selected Palin as his running
mate, he thus would assume the responsibility of her choice as his
replacement if God forbid the worse were to happen. On the experience
factor alone, it is ineluctable that, according to the famous phrase of
Senator Hillary Clinton, I would trust the judgment of the former Navy
Pilot, if awakened at 3 AM to address a national security calamity. But
let’s go beyond the mere "experience factor.”
Choice on Strategic Direction
What counts at this stage, in addition to experience in matters of
national security, is a sense of strategic direction into the future.
Senator McCain often speaks of the man who will have to face incoming
international crises. He is right on that point: conflicts are brewing
and the next President will have to face them head on. Senator Biden has
even alluded to crises being concocted to test Senator Obama (if
elected). He may be right by accident. For I argue that what lies ahead
of us is already happening and will happen: the forces aimed at
confronting the United States and democracies around the world aren’t
holding their breath to decide if they will resume their offensives or
drop their agenda, depending on who will seize the White House in
November. These forces have their plans for both McCain and Obama. They
do not tailor their world view based on the lucky winner of US election,
rather they tailor their plans, speed and maneuvers to defeat America
based on the direction adopted by the winner of the Presidential contest
in this country.
Therefore if the enemy wages future campaigns based on its perception of
the next US President’s world vision and "generates crises” accordingly,
then it is logical to compare the strategic agendas of both candidates
regarding the confrontation to come. In other words, if the direction
taken by the new President is new, and both candidates claim they will
execute change, then it is a must to check these "new directions” and
compare them with the potential threats.
Unfortunately the multiple debates between the Presidential and Vice
Presidential nominees didn’t leave us with significant information about
the global vision of both campaigns as to what the threat is and how to
defeat it. Perhaps the scrambling by both camps to respond to the
dramatic financial crumbling kept them away from drawing the map of the
future regarding the global conflicts we’re engaged in. But that was a
mistake in both camps, even though it was more politically profitable
for the Obama ticket to concentrate on the economy, and it was a vital
necessity for the McCain ticket to assuage the fears of everyday
Americans, as polls showed the gap between the two camps.
Economy Is a Hostage to National Security
What both campaigns have failed to understand or were unwilling to admit
is the broader context of the economic quick sands we’re in. Surely
there are financial and managerial reasons behind the meltdown which
we’re witnessing. But this failure is happening within the context of a
wider economic war waged against the United States for strategic
reasons.
Two arguments should have been part of the debate. They will come to
haunt the future of this country nevertheless.
One: a systemic economic crisis –even if rooted in domestic
mismanagement- cannot be resolved outside a healthier international
environment. That is a reality which only future economists will confirm
for us. Short of unleashing a full economic revolution leading to energy
independence, America is doomed to swim in financial tensions and
crises: the time of insulation from overseas pressures is over. We are
seven –if not seventeen- years late for our vital fight of energy
independence.
Two: We are being attacked by an "oil empire,” OPEC, which targets our
ability to act internationally and eventually put us on our knees
domestically. Not only our future economic renaissance is at risk but
our present state of financial affairs is at a higher risk of further
crumbling if we do not go on the offensive. Compare this with the state
of the presidential debate: the answer is close to catastrophic. We’re
not even discussing it nor are we informing the public about the dangers
looming on the horizons. The current economic crisis is only a piece of
the mega economic debacle being prepared for us. The response to the
current drama is not even economic and none of the campaigns have even
addressed the mega level for fears of electoral snags.
But if we compare the two candidates on strategic economic levels, we
can conclude as follows: Obama offers to resolve the economic crisis
separately from the mega economic confrontation worldwide while McCain
only shyly hints at a wider scale beyond the corruption in Wall Street
and the mismanagement in Washington DC. McCain wants to stop sending 700
billion dollars to "regimes who do not like us.” Obama wants us "not to
borrow cash from China to send it to Saudi Arabia.” McCain – timidly -
tells us there is a foe out there somewhere, while Obama doesn’t.
Between the blur and the blindness, I chose the first.
Are We at War or Not?
Naturally McCain calls what we’re doing since 9/11 a War on
Terror. On Terror or on something else, that is another subject,
but the former POW sees it as a "war,” with a goal to attain and against
a "foe.” Obama rarely calls it a war, often putting the blame on the
United States, and he is vague regarding the "enemy.” In an article
during the primaries, where my favorite candidate wasn’t McCain, I wrote
that a US President who doesn’t see the enemy cannot defeat it. In the
national election, I state even more emphatically that a candidate who
does not admit that there is a war waged against our democracy can
hardly defend us.
I would understand if Senator Obama proposes to end the War on Terror as
a whole. I would obviously disagree that he can, but I would see his
rationale of a unilateral pull out of the conflict which, by the way,
could explain his platform of "sitting down” with actual foes such as
Ahmadinejad, Assad and others. The problem remains that his position
regarding the "what is” is still unclear. Is it that he doesn’t believe
that we were attacked in a global manner, or is it that he believes that
we provoked such a Jihadi campaign? Well, between Obama’s non
recognition of the conflict and McCain’s basic attitude that we are at
war, regardless of how to win it and when, I’d chose the latter.
Defining the Threat
In the last seven years, my main thesis in the defense of our democracy
and of civil societies around the world recommended a clear cut
identification of the threat. For if the latter was unidentified,
unclear or subject to camouflage, the entire strategy of resistance to
the menace would be ineffective and would put the homeland and allies
under tremendous risks. President George Bush tried to identify the
threat doctrine of al Qaeda, its allies and of the Iranian regime. But
as of 2006, he retreated from educating the public on the foe’s world
vision. In this election campaign, we have two candidates with different
visions on the threat. Senator McCain gives it a name: Radical Islamic
Terrorism (he recently used the term "Jihadists” one time); and Senator
Obama who doesn’t identify the ideology of the terrorists. Naturally I
would prefer the candidate who defines it, even if that definition needs
to be improved, in this case, McCain.
Iraq
Senator Obama voted against invading Iraq. That is a legitimate
position. But one would need to know on what grounds? If the argument
was that it was a strategic mistake to topple Saddam Hussein while we
hadn’t found Osama Bin Laden, then the next challenge will be in Darfur.
Will we allow the genocide against Africans to continue in Sudan if we
still haven’t found the leader of al Qaeda in Pakistan? If Obama’s logic
is about not engaging in any action as long as "Waldo” is on the run, US
efforts in rescuing endangered populations is then doomed.
But if the Senator from Illinois was opposed to the removal of Iraq’s
dictator because he prefers to leave the Shia and the Kurds to their
horrendous destiny, then the matter is even more serious. Either way, I
haven’t seen or read an Obama explanation that considers the 2003
campaign in Iraq as a weakening of the War on Terror: For had this been
the case, then Obama may have a legitimate point.
But his votes in the Senate about the 2003 "invasion of Iraq," unless
explained again, were an opposition to the War on terror not just the
war in Iraq.
If elected President, Obama will remove the troops from Iraq without
disabling Iran’s and Syria’s abilities and ambitions to penetrate their
neighbor. For if he intends to engage with Tehran and Damascus to cut
deals over Iraq, how can the latter be equipped strategically to perform
what coalition forces are now achieving? An abrupt letting down of Iraq
will lead to a catastrophic domino effect in the region opening the path
to Iran to reach the Mediterranean with all the unfathomable
consequences on world peace.
Undoubtedly the Bush Administration wasn’t brilliant in managing the
Iraq strategy. Surely there were other choices after Tora Bora in 2002
than Iraq. I’ll address them in future writings. But since President
Bush’s team decided to do justice in Baghdad first, it could have done
it faster, better and finished earlier. That is a valid critique of the
Iraq war. Senator Obama’s criticism is diametrically different. He was
opposed to remove Saddam or any other dictator, by force or by any other
means. The reality is that for a candidate "for change” as it is
claimed, his platform seems to be of status quo, to the advantage of the
Jihadists, Baathists and other authoritarian regimes from Tehran to
Caracas.
Senator McCain has criticized the management of the War in Iraq; and he
was right. He wants victory to be the benchmark of withdrawal; he is
also right. But I haven’t read yet what constitutes victory in Iraq. My
sense is that many in Washington DC – traumatized by the Jihadi
propaganda - aren’t sharing yet with the American public what’s lying
ahead for us. This Presidential campaign is between a candidate, Senator
Obama, who is not telling the people that he is against the whole war on
terror; and the other candidate, Senator McCain who is not telling the
voters how much more serious this war is with the Jihadists. In this
case I would trust McCain simply because he has told us that we can’t
quit, even though we need miles of explanations for what is next.
Afghanistan & Pakistan
Senator Obama stated that he would transfer troops from Iraq to
Afghanistan to put pressures on al Qaeda. Taken as is, this statement is
strategically sound. Moving forces from one battlefield to another is
decided by strategists and is logical if the goal is to win in both
places, i.e. in the war on terror.
But I am still unsure if Senator Obama’s grand plan is about winning the
War on Terror since I haven’t seen his grand strategy about the
confrontation with the Jihadists. Actually his opposition to the Iraq
campaign, unlike Senator Clinton’s criticism, is based on opposition to
the idea that we are in conflict with a worldwide web of radical forces.
Until I read otherwise, my conclusion is that Obama’s long term strategy
is to end the global war with the Jihadists and replace it with
deals-cutting policies with radical regimes and organizations.
Hence in Afghanistan, his ultimate goal is to kill Bin Laden but to
reintegrate the Taliban in Kabul. That would be the equivalent of
eliminating Hitler but bringing back the Nazis to a post WWII Germany.
His statements about attacking inside Pakistan if we have specific
information about the location of Bin Laden are worrisome. He opposed
sending troops to Iraq to save Shia and Kurds from Saddam, but he would
order troops into a sovereign country, an ally and already at war with
al Qaeda, to kill "Waldo.” This proposition makes so little sense that I
read it through the prism of reverse psychology.
In fact, since Senator Obama wants to quit in Iraq, reconciliation with
the Taliban in Afghanistan and a non-intervention in Darfur, he probably
decided to claim "offensive” in the only place where it will not happen.
A massive US attack in Pakistan to finish off al Qaeda, unless
authorized by Islamabad, is contrary to all strategic logic and could
enflame the sole Muslim nuclear power with the cataclysmic risks it
entails. My sense is that the Senator chose to make this bravado in
public precisely because he will never issue that order if he is
elected. Instead he will direct his diplomats to "sit down” with the
Taliban and try to cut a deal.
Senator McCain’s approach is more simple and pragmatic. He wouldn’t
oppose sending troops from Iraq to Afghanistan if the military
strategists would recommend so. He said a surge in Afghanistan may
provide similar results as in Iraq: possible. I am not privy to his
plans for "winning” in Afghanistan or his emergency plans for a dramatic
development in Pakistan. But between an Obama policy that would lose
Iraq, re-Talibanize Afghanistan and risk a nuclear flare in Pakistan,
I’d still go with a more modest but realistic approach by McCain until
better strategies are designed in the next four years.
Lebanon & Syria
Senator McCain committed to implement UNSCR 1559; that is, to disarm
Hezbollah and support the Cedars Revolution in Lebanon. Senator Obama
wants to "sit down” with Bashar Assad, Hezbollah’s ally. Obviously, I
support McCain on this issue.
Israel & The Palestinians
Both Senators have committed to "the security of Israel.” In election
times this statement is standard. Both Senators said they will support a
two-state solution. At this stage of the peace process between Israel
and the Palestinian Authority, this is also a universally accepted deal.
But Senator Obama’s approach to the Iran and Syrian regimes indicates
that he will press Israel and the Palestinian Authority to "sit down”
with Hamas and Islamic Jihad as well. The pattern of bringing in the
"radicals” (at the expense of the democracy-seekers) seems to be a
future foreign policy doctrine for Senator Obama. In the case of the
Israel-Palestinian process, it will only weaken the moderates among the
Palestinians and undermine the rise of peace-seeking forces, knowing
that Hamas ultimately doesn’t want a Jewish state in the region and
wants to obstruct the rise of a secular and democratic Palestinian state
as well. Senator McCain, more cautious in this regard, supports the Camp
David and Road Map processes, putting an Israel-Palestinian Authority
agreement first. I would prefer this approach.
Darfur
Senator McCain would send US forces under UN sponsorship to help
establish a protection zone for the African Muslim people of Darfur.
Senator Obama’s approach of "cutting deals” with Tehran and Damascus
cannot but follow the same logic to "cut a deal” with Khartoum’s regime.
In genocide interventions, there are no deals to be cut other than
saving people from dying and being ethnically cleansed. Hence, without
hesitation, I would side with the McCain readiness to help "save Darfur”
on the ground, a slogan used by Hollywood figures without advancing any
practical solution to the genocide issue.
Alliances
Senator Obama’s spokespersons claimed their candidate will build wider
alliances and reestablish a multilateral approach to international
relations. This is an excellent principle which I have been promoting in
my last three books but the question is "alliance about what?” If Obama
sought outreach to build the widest coalition of Governments to defeat
al Qaeda and its ilk, this has already been done. If the projected
alliance is to reach more countries, including those who oppose our
confrontation with the Jihadists - such as Venezuela, Iran, Syria, Sudan
and North Korea - then we will be defeating our original purpose. If
Obama wants to enhance relations with Russia and India against the
terrorists, he will have to define Jihadism as a threat, which he
hasn’t. He will have to agree with McCain and pre 2006 Bush that there
are doctrines promoted by movements such as Wahhabism, the Muslim
Brotherhood and Deobandism which are a common foe to this wide alliance
he is seeking.
But that would contradict his opposition to the concept of a full
confrontation with the Jihadi web. If by new allies he means France,
Germany, the UK, Spain, and other European democracies, they are already
in the fight with our common enemies. Even China is at war with the
Jihadists. So who does Obama want to include in the projected new
alliance? Unless the new coalition will be among those who want to end
the War on terror. Senator McCain’s more modest approach doesn’t add
much to the existing web of alliances. If elected he should break the
taboos with other counter Jihadi countries and widen that type of
alliance. He should do better than President Bush. I still prefer the
modest advance of McCain over the foggy designs of Obama.
America’s Image
Another slogan advanced by the Obama platform and inherited from the
John Kerry Presidential agenda is the so-called "American image”
worldwide and the necessity of reestablishing a "credible portrait.”
Well, this myth has to be aggressively responded to because it only
serves the Jihadist propaganda. Indeed, what do we mean when we say that
America’s "image” has been muddied internationally? Is it because of
Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib? And who are the people upset with the US
image?
The Obama campaign and its intellectuals haven’t answered much on this
simply because this so-called PR problem is in fact a component of a
Jihadi offensive worldwide to deter the United States from provoking
democratic change in the Middle East. Washington’s image is "ugly” by
Salafi, Khomeinist and Baathist standards of course because American
power (often used unintelligently) has caused the rise of freedom
enclaves in Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon, and beyond. That is why al
Jazeera, al Aalam, al Manar and the Salafi web sites are exploding
against "America’s image.” Surely the oil-producing regimes in the
region and Hugo Chavez’s oligarchic elite dislike American support of
reformers and democracy forces. When America promotes democracy (with
tremendous mistakes) of course the anti-democratic web will muddy its
image.
So what is the image the Obama policy would like to reestablish? The
photo ops with Iran’s Mullahs, Damascus’ bloody dictator, Caracas’s
populist leader, or Khartoum’s genocide perpetrator? Some Obama future
Presidential advisors (if he wins) have been advocating a policy of
humanitarian aid only. They argue that the US should act as a peace
force only. Who are they kidding? Why wasn’t the US able to send
humanitarian aid to the Kurds before the removal of Saddam Hussein, or
establish a corridor in Darfur as long as Bashir is obstructing it, or
help the North Koreans from starvation? The "academic circus” who
pretend to understand the world better than your average citizen have
shown us their brilliance in the 1990s. They were given eight precious
years of a post-Soviet era and they failed miserably.
McCain’s plan for a better American image isn’t clear but US actions to
give democracy a victory are the best long terms investments to get that
image restored, because unfortunately, the systemic failure of the Bush
Administration to use its own resources in the so-called war of ideas is
a fact. A McCain White House will have to reform all resources
authorized by the taxpayers to draw support around the world from hearts
and minds. A McCain Administration will have a severe uphill battle to
reach out to the natural allies around the world, and the Greater Middle
East in particular: the peoples. Unfortunately, as we know from their
advisors-to-be, an Obama Administration will cozy up with the oppressors
worldwide as a way to "change” America’s image. It will only send
humanitarian assistance – and cameras to cover the show - if and when
the bad guys allow it. That is not a change in image that the masses
around the world would want to see. My choice is between the uncertain
success and the certain failure, I take the first.
Defeating Racism in America
One noble cause I would support without hesitation is to see a minority
man or woman become the President of the United States. What a joy to
see the son of an immigrant, a matter I can relate with directly, enter
the White House. This is the country I decided to emigrate to almost
twenty years ago. In the past quarter of a century, I saw the nation I
joined wholeheartedly rapidly rejecting racism. An African-American
General in the Joint Chiefs of Staff, then Secretary of State, and then
an African American woman becoming a national security advisor only to
succeed her predecessor as a Secretary of State as well. A Middle
Eastern American from Michigan becoming an Energy secretary, Hispanics
and Asians across Congress and the executive powers including in the
cabinet, and finally a half African American nominated for the
Presidency of the United States, and very possibly a head of state in
2009.
That’s how racism has been defeated at the highest levels. But I resent
the imposition of an ideological worldview on good hearted Americans
under the aegis of the racism issue. For Senator Barack Obama to be
nominated by a major Party is an ultimate defeat to racism. But his
election to the Presidency is about his agenda not his (half) race. We
would be all happy to see a minority becoming a President but not to use
such an equation to give a pass to an international agenda which would
hurt minorities and underdogs around the world.
To defeat racism and oppression of minorities worldwide the next
President of the United States should be determined to save Africans
from genocide, ethnic minorities from persecution in the Middle East and
women from suppression across the Third World. That mission isn’t
determined by skin color in Washington but by commitment to confront the
oppressors of any type around the world.
Had the Obama agenda been unequivocally pro-freedom internationally,
rejecting concession to totalitarianism, and very precise in identifying
the threat doctrines of the terrorists, then he could have won my
support with little questions asked.
The Heart of the Matter
Unlike many of my colleagues with whom I share counterterrorism views
for the future, my choice for the next President was not shaped by the
most visible components of the debate. It wasn’t "Joe the plumber,”
"spreading the wealth,” the real estate crisis, the financial meltdown
or the battle for taxes. These are crucial issues but I believe the
economic problems we’re facing need more than one presidency and a
mixture of solutions to address them and solve them. Pure Socialism or
unleashed Capitalism aren’t going to fix the economy or satisfy the
frustration of millions of Americans over the next decade.
Maybe the two party system isn’t able anymore to provide full answers in
the 21st century. As a Political Scientist and a US citizen I
think that the American system will correct itself gradually simply
because there are no larger middle class societies around the world than
the American one. The swing between liberal and conservative measures
every decade or so are regulating factors until an appropriate system is
found. But this normal swinging is now occurring during a world conflict
and can be affected by outside forces aiming at the nation as a whole.
It is Constantinople which is targeted, not its emperors. Those who are
set on voting for Obama because they fear for their social security and
healthcare and those who want McCain because they fear high government
taxes are right to be concerned in their own way. I am concerned for a
state of affairs where we may not have a national homeland, let alone
either high taxes or a solvent social security program.
Homeland Security First
Yes, we need to live our lives the best we can; consequently, we need to
make the best decisions about the next President and his agenda. But all
that has to happen not in a void, but in the context of a secure
homeland. Twice in this decade we saw the country vacillating. In
September 2001, the coming down of the twin towers was an end of a peace
era. Last September 2008, the coming down of our financial towers was an
end of an era of economic security. Beware of a "September” that could
bring down the towers of our national security.
The flames of the urban uprisings in France, of the train bombings in
Madrid, of the subway blasts in London and the school massacre in Beslan
are only writings on the wall. The OPEC aggression against the US
economy, the formation of gas cartels by Iran, Qatar and Venezuela with
the enticement to Russia to join; all that are just ominous signs of
what is ahead. And in such a world environment, US homeland security
seems to be where the final game will be played. As an analyst of
terrorist strategies, I do believe that the most dangerous stages for
our national security are yet to come and my concerns are very high as
to how to address them. The penetration of our systems, including
educational, legal, bureaucratic, technological, defense and security by
the Jihadists is ongoing and is projected to expand. The world may have
harsh crises but no crisis can equate the collapse of US Homeland
Security. Al Qaeda has often stated that it wishes to commit genocide of
four million Americans, including women and children. Iranian President
Ahmadinejad and his regime have openly stated that a world without
America is possible and better. These attitudes, if anything, indicate
that the American national homeland is a target, a real target. If the
enemy is successful one time in blasting our defense system to the core,
the entire debate about the economy is over because there won’t be one
to discuss.
There are large segments in our society which have been disabled from
understanding that the nation is at risk. They were made to think that
this war against us is a matter of foreign policy and a President who
can just "talk” to some people out there will simply solve it and
maintain the paychecks flowing. Many among us don’t understand that the
world around us can simply crumble if we don’t have leadership that can
strike a balance between defending the country and the free world and at
the same time managing the economy successfully. But the bottom line is
that these two are linked, deeply linked.
Senator McCain declared that the threat to the Homeland is a movement
and an ideology, Jihadism. Senator Obama didn’t tell us if that is his
view as well. Instead we saw shreds of political alliances between his
campaign and groups affiliated with this particular ideology. I am not
impressed with the "Weather Underground” network story as much as I am
concerned about the access the political Jihadists will have to US
National Security.
If that happens, Homeland Security will be at risk. Hence until I get
answers to this fundamental question from Senator Obama’s campaign, I do
have a national security concern. Until then I can project a spread of
Jihadi sympathizer networks within the country and even throughout many
layers of Government. Over four years, and possibly eight, such a growth
would become malignant. Over less than a decade, Americans could find
themselves in situations never experienced since the Civil War.
One ballot today – regardless of the sincerity and good intentions of
candidates in November 2008 - can affect where and how future
generations will have to fight for survival years from now. A strong
counter argument was made to me about my concerns: among the national
security advisors and experts to enter the executive branch with an
Obama Presidency are people who see this threat with clarity, so why the
concern? My answer as an analyst in Jihadi long term strategies is that,
in the absence of a defense doctrine that identifies the threat, no one
can guarantee that the enlightened counter terrorism experts potentially
moving in as of January 2009 will be there the following year, in four
or even eight years from now. This is the real bottom line.
If the Obama campaign had provided a strategic document on the Jihadi
threat, my entire case wouldn’t have been necessary. I haven’t seen such
a document or even a simple statement. Moreover, what convinced me that
we’re dealing with a potential change toward the worse in US National
Security are the writings and declarations of those who constitute the
Senator’s academic and security elite. In fact, not only we may get four
more years of the Clinton eight years – when the Terrorist doctrine was
missed catastrophically - but we could get four years of unparalleled
threat growth. I do hope I am wrong and I am still hoping I will get
answers before Election Day.
Freedoms & Educating the Public
Last but not least, and for the first time since the end of the Cold
War, there seems to be a concern about a scrupulous respect for freedom
of the press and of expression in some "ideological” quarters of a
potential Obama Administration. Although I do believe that the Senator
from Illinois has kept a strong record on the necessity of a balanced
debate regarding the nation’s fundamental issues, and although Senator
Biden has been a proponent of free speech, there are signs that radical
groups could use Government positions to harass media that would be
critical of an Obama Administration on national security grounds.
What’s more is the dangerous possibility that (short of a counter Jihadi
doctrine) elements of Wahhabi and Khomeinist advocacy circles would take
advantage of a "new direction” to strike at the counterterrorism
community in the private sector, targeting the advances made for the
last seven years in educating Americans about the threat. Such a
development would be a red line for the nation’s defense. To be direct
about it, already under the Bush Administration, the Wahhabi and
Khomeinist lobbies have wreaked havoc throughout the bureaucracy,
blocking major reforms needed to educate civil servants and citizens to
learn about the threats looming over the country and its next
generations. Under a McCain Administration there are no guarantees that
the "Jihadophile lobby” will recede, but chances are much higher for new
counterterrorism education to make a breakthrough than under an Obama
Administration.
Under the latter, Muslim reformers in America won’t have an equal chance
with the Jihadi pressure groups to have their message received by their
communities. Middle East dissidents will have their stories marginalized
in the public sector so that it won’t perturb the deals to "be cut with
the regimes in the region.” All that is predictable and projectable,
hence the options are really limited if not set in terms of choice.
The Choice
On the one hand, Senator Obama has a character to be admired and has
skills to make other politicians jealous. He would make America look
very good. Had we not been in a confrontation with the Jihadist forces
worldwide, I would have gladly voted for him. Strange as it may be for
many of my colleagues, his alleged "socialism” doesn’t intimidate me,
nor does his "radical liberalism.” America’s society will only absorb
what it can digest.
On the other hand, Senator McCain is a national hero and a product of
real American traditions. I would have liked for him to have been
elected in 2000 so that he would have been the Commander in Chief on
September 11 (with all respect due to President Bush). There are other
men and women who are also qualified to lead this nation in these
politically and economically trying times such as Senator Clinton,
Governor Romney and others. But our political process has selected
McCain and Obama and one of them has to become the President.
"Primo vivere” says the Roman adage. You’ve got to survive first
and you’ve got to be free too. I have learned this the hard way. Hence
in this 2008 Presidential election, I will vote on national security,
that is national survival. All other issues are linked to our ability as
a nation to make it through these very critical years. After having
reviewed the two platforms from that perspective, and short of
discovering what can change my analysis in the next few days, I wish
Senator Obama good luck and, as a registered independent, I will vote
for Senator McCain for the President of the United States.
Ultimately Americans will decide about their future and whatever it will
be, we will continue to try to make it better for our children. |