McChrystal v. Obama
BY Herschel Smith15 years, 2 months ago
Jules Crittenden notes that General McChrystal’s speech to London’s Institute for Strategic Studies caused a disturbance in the administration, especially because of McChrystal’s categorical rejection of the small footprint counter-terrorism model (advocated by Senator Kerry and VP Joseph Biden), saying that it would lead to Afghanistan becoming Chaos-istan (also see NYT).
Obama is said to be angry with McChrystal, and the never-serious National Security Adviser Jim Jones responded to McChrystal by saying that it’s better for military advice to come up through the chain of command. Secretary of Defense Gates said he would salute and carry out whatever orders Obama gives. Of course … he must do so or resign.
But there is something else in the wind concerning McChrystal and Obama having nothing to do with McChrystal. Spencer Ackerman attempts to align McChrystal with Obama’s strategic vision (h/t Greyhawk), but he’s stretching and embellishing the case. McChrystal has now gone on record basically saying that the small footprint model is stupid and won’t work, no matter how long Obama’s review takes.
A more emotional reaction comes from the Huffington Post, where they believe that McChrystal’s speech is an assault on the chain of command and the constitution (and the sky is falling and the world is coming to an end tomorrow). On the other side of the isle, a bellicose reaction comes from Mackubin Thomas Owens at NRO’s Corner. The reactions range from attempting to align McChrystal’s vision with Obama’s to almost-horror, even among ostensibly conservative commentators, that McChrystal would have “circumvented” the chain of command.
I won’t comment here on the issue of Generals offering counsel in a public manner because there is too much history to rehearse. But in order to place this in context, remember that Obama campaigned almost constantly on the dearth of focus on Afghanistan and how the campaign in Iraq was usurping much-needed resources. The campaign hasn’t stopped, and as late of March 2009 Obama was saying the same things from the offices of the White House: “To focus on the greatest threat to our people, America must no longer deny resources to Afghanistan because of the war in Iraq.”
Obama has the authority to lay out whatever communication protocol he wishes, but the American people have a right to know and approve strategy. Yes – approve strategy. Americans do that by the vote. It might be done after the fact, during the next Presidential race or even before that when Senators and Congressmen are elected. Or it might be done by public opinion swaying the political winds of the day. Either way, America has a right to know about strategy whether the conversation is initiated by McChrystal or someone else.
When sons of America are sacrificed to a cause, it has always been and still is part of the warp and woof of the national conversation. It should be so. Obama can politicize the war in Afghanistan, but what he cannot consistently and legitimately do is complain when the same national conversation he initiated turns the question on him. The Presidency is not a monarchy.
On October 6, 2009 at 8:13 am, Warbucks said:
That Which Must Not Be Spoken
The budding young political career of the idealist-President just now learning about himself at the expense of lives of American troops, feeds another monster in the making that needs to be slaughtered before it learns to walk…… homeland insurrection by fundamentalist warriors …. of which there are tens of thousands who carry knowledge, experience, will, power, and means combined with a deep sense of righteousness soundly ensconced in patriot zeal and sealed in the hardening fires of religious justification.
One can not help but project the Afghan experience as a field-test for insurrectionist forces within our own homeland, that if it can be done in Afghanistan, it can be done anywhere.
The brinkmanship of diplomacy of this President isn’t in Europe or the Muslim-belt of Iran or Iraq or Afghanistan, but right here at home and the Generals know it all too well.