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Michael Barone
13 May 2013
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Republicans Grow Less Hawkish in Wake of Iraq War

Comment

Are Republicans no longer the party more inclined to military interventions and an assertive foreign policy?

It's a question raised by the enthusiastic response to Sen. Rand Paul's 13-hour filibuster and to his not-very-interventionist foreign policy.

It's raised also by House Republicans' willingness to accept the budget sequester, which includes defense cuts that former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta called "devastating."

Barack Obama thought those cuts would be so unpalatable that Republicans would agree to increase tax revenues to avoid them. A decade or two ago, that would have been true. Not so today.

And it's a question raised by the silence on the part of most Republican officeholders and the contrition of others on the 10th anniversary of the U.S. intervention in Iraq.

Only John McCain and a few others have been defending a war that almost all Republicans and many Democrats, including Hillary Clinton and John Kerry, initially supported.

Historically, neither party has always been either hawkish or dovish. Democrats supported the Mexican war; Whigs were against.

Republicans backed Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War; many Democrats wanted a compromise peace. Republican supported the Spanish American War and suppression of the Philippine insurrection; Democrat William Jennings Bryan ran against "imperialism."

For half a century, Democrats were the party more supportive of military intervention. Democrat Woodrow Wilson, after winning re-election as the man who kept us out of war, called for a declaration of war against Germany six months later. He got it, with 50-some dissents.

In the 1930s, Republican ranks included more isolationists than interventionists, and vice versa for Democrats.

Franklin Roosevelt scrambled to send arms to beleaguered Britain and cut off oil sales (when the U.S. produced most of the world's oil) to hostile Japan. When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, all but one member of Congress voted to declare war.

But some notable Republicans, including Chicago Tribune publisher Col. Robert McCormick and former President Herbert Hoover, charged that FDR had maneuvered us into what people today call a war of choice.

Democratic presidents led America into wars in Korea and Vietnam, with death tolls more than 10 times what we have suffered in Iraq and Afghanistan.

That was the history Bob Dole was referring to when he talked of "Democrat wars" in the 1976 vice presidential debate. But by that time, the term was obsolete.

Only two Democrats (and no Republicans) voted against the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin resolution that Lyndon Johnson used as his license to send up to 550,000 U.S. troops to Vietnam. But by 1968, opposition to that war was welling up, primarily but not entirely within the Democratic Party.

LBJ was opposed by antiwar Eugene McCarthy and dropped out of the race. In 1972, Democrats nominated the dovish George McGovern. For nearly half a century, they have been the party less supportive of military intervention.

Not that Republicans have invariably supported it. Ronald Reagan aided the Nicaraguan Contras and intervened in Grenada but withdrew from Lebanon. He built up the military but didn't find much occasion to use it.

George H.W. Bush got approval from the United Nations before asking Congress to authorize the Gulf War. George W. Bush sought U.N. approval for Iraq, too.

Democrats remained obsessed with Vietnam. Their speeches opposing Contra aid and the Gulf and Iraq wars were full of arguments more relevant to the Gulf of Tonkin resolution than to the issue at hand.

Some Democrats disagreed. Bill Clinton used force (without U.N. approval) in Serbia and Kosovo. Almost all Democrats supported intervention in Afghanistan after 9/11.

But almost all congressional Democrats tried to stop George W. Bush's successful surge strategy in Iraq. Hillary Clinton found cause to question the veracity of Gen. David Petraeus.

The surge came too late to salvage the reputation of the Iraq War. Polls now show majorities think it was a mistake. Most Republican politicians seem disinclined to suggest we should intervene anywhere else.

World problems loom: North Korea, Iran, Syria, North Africa. Barack Obama may choose to respond militarily. He has just beefed up missile defense in response to North Korea.

If he follows up on his threat to attack Iran's nuclear program, we could have a 2016 presidential race in which Republican Rand Paul criticizes military action and Democrat Hillary Clinton defends it.

That would be a political turnabout as stark as in the 1960s. Could it happen?

Michael Barone, senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner (www.washingtonexaminer.com), is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics. To find out more about Michael Barone, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2013 THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

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Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
Many republican writers are now critisizing the wars and leaning more towards a non-interventionist policy. Why didn't they speak up over the past few years? Why wait til now? I suppose it dosen't matter too much. Rand Pauls event has sparked some serious change in the republicans, and its for the better.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Thu Mar 28, 2013 9:11 AM
Sir;...Your republican wars have their reasons and their purpose... The reason is what ever they say it is; but the purpose is to rob the bank of the people, and that can be done best with the drumbeats of war...
It is like beating communism... That was never a serious threat... We have the socialism of poverty and the privitization of wealth; but communism was never a danger in this land where trying to hold a union meeting is like herding cats with a fly swatter...The belief in the individual is as strong in this country on as little evidence as the belief in Santa Caluse among 5 year olds... But so long as they could publish the fear they could rob the treasury, and that was the order of business until the communists threw in the towel and said: We Lost!!!.. By then, robbing the treasury was just a bad habit among republicans that no one condoned, and everyone did in private...
Why should I care... Have your damned wars; but don't expect that when you have bankrupted the country that the people won't go looking to the republicans for their commonwealth...
Most people will not mind how much is stolen from them so long as they have enough to live, but beyond that point they are bound to get irate... Now; to have your conquests, and to have the protection for all the capital your class has ship abroad for the exploitation of slave labor, you have begun to take food out of people mouths... You are beginning to turn their dreams of the future to shit before their eyes... I would not recommend it; but if your class could stop, the would have already stopped... So keep on wit it...Its your hangin...Make a speech...

Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #2
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Thu Mar 28, 2013 2:37 PM
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