Rand Paul, looks like his father, but doesn't ring the same bells
and smells like a neocon in training..
October 11, 2012
.
I am still trying to recover from the
Republican Party’s overwhelming failure to understand that only Ron Paul was
speaking good sense about the dismal state of U.S. foreign policy. .
Depending on whom you listen to, however, one
might almost think in spite of all evidence to the contrary that the revolution
is still going on and just one more tweak will deliver a Brave New World. That
is because hardly a day passes without yet another email from the various
organizations that are seeking to cash in on the Ron Paul legacy, demonstrating
that they have the moxie to continue the fight.
The most recent email from John Tate and
Campaign for Liberty pledged to do something about drones, the latest empty
promise that comes on top of not-quite-achieved victories in auditing the Fed
and Pentagon and defending the Internet. Just send $50 or whatever one can
spare. We’ll spend it wisely. Really.
In spite of it all, I strongly believe that
Dr. Paul’s immense contribution to the political debate forced something of a
rethinking of the unfortunate direction that our nation has taken in the past
10 years. His message continues to resonate, if muted, and is worth more than
an eventual footnote in a history book.
In the area of foreign policy, he alone had
the courage to speak out on issues that the other candidates chose to ignore
while puffing out their chests, wrapping themselves in the flag, and boasting
of “American Exceptionalism.”
The only problem is that many of those who are
now crying “legacy,” including Tate and Company, couldn’t have cared less about
foreign policy when they might have actually done something to intensify the
debate.
They obsess about drones in the United States
while ignoring their use overseas. They were precisely the folks who failed the
campaign or who sold out in the first place. Onward and upward, leaving no man
behind has turned into “let us reason together” and let’s “go along to get
along.”
Somehow the Emperor Caligula’s naming of his
favorite horse, Incitatus, consul of Rome came to mind when I recently read about how Jesse Benton, the controversial
campaign manager for Ron Paul, had moved smoothly over to manage Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s re-election.
Many Paul supporters long believed that Benton
was intent on grooming himself for bigger and better things, hence the frequent
disconnects in the latter days of the Paul campaign, including an announcement that the campaign had been suspended that was
reversed on the following day.
It is hard to think much of Benton or to wish
him well, though he may have discovered his own purgatory now that he has to
package the lugubrious McConnell in an attempt to make him appear human, a task
that might well be beyond anyone’s capability.
Does anyone seriously think that Benton was
brought over to the GOP establishment to help in a race that is a foregone
conclusion to attract support from the Paulistas and tea partyers? It is to
reward Benton and bring him into the fold as what passes for a loyal
Republican.
But perhaps the unkindest cut of all is the
betrayal by Sen. Rand Paul, who has clearly set himself up as the heir apparent
to his father’s legacy. He now has a fundraising mechanism called Randpac, which is sending out
hard-hitting emails asking for money.
I do not doubt for a second that Rand
understands at least some of what his father stood for and is willing to take
some unpopular positions to support what he thinks to be right. But his father
never endorsed Mitt Romney, and, while it is understandable that loyal
Republican Rand would stand behind the GOP candidate for president, his full approval of Romney’s foreign policy and his willingness to serve as Romney’s vice president were
unforgivable.
Romney stands for everything that Ron Paul
abhors, including unrestricted overseas intervention and chest-thumping
militarism.
And Rand’s latest emails contain material that
is more reminiscent of Peter King, the rabble-rousing congressman from Long
Island who has been going around arranging hearings to investigate American
Muslims, than of his father. Rand’s latest schtick is to take away money given
to governments that don’t fully support us.
If an email that went out on Sept. 29 is
anything to go by, Rand Paul has apparently completed his conversion to
Orthodox GOPism, including integration into its dominant neoconservative
foreign policy wing. The email boasts about Rand’s sponsorship of a bill that
would have stopped “handouts” to Egypt, Pakistan, and Libya.
The bill, which Rand describes as the “will of
the American people,” died in the Senate by a vote of 81 to 10. The
email includes a one-minute video that shows angry, presumably Muslim crowds
interposed with burning vehicles and buildings together with a narrative tract
describing how a number of countries are not good allies and don’t make any
effort to support U.S. interests while at the same time attacking our diplomats
overseas. The video is the basis of a TV ad that will apparently be used in
television markets where six vulnerable Democrats who supported continuing aid
to the countries in question are running for reelection.
The ad will be run thanks to a “Massive Bring
Our Tax Dollars Home Money Bomb,” which is the real purpose of the email. Rand
makes some specific claims: that the three countries
“Look the other way while violent mobs burn our flag and chant ‘Death to America’”;“Hardly lift a finger to bring to justice those who murdered four American citizens ~ including our ambassador”; and“Refuse to protect our embassies and torture and imprison citizens for acting like the U.S. allies these countries claim to be.”
It should escape no one’s notice that the
countries being targeted are all Muslim, which means they are fair game.
Israel, the largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid, is not mentioned.
One can reasonably challenge ALL foreign aid, as Ron Paul himself did, but selecting countries based on a false narrative about what is going on in the Middle East is nothing but the cheapest form of pandering imaginable.It is a dose of straight neoconservatism.
People demonstrate against Washington in countries
like Egypt for a number of reasons, but one of the big reasons is that we
supported a dictatorial regime in that country because it suited our interests,
not those of the Egyptian people. Rand should know that because his father
certainly understood and spoke out about it.
And the rest of the narrative also does not
pass the smell test. When last I checked, Libyans had warned the U.S.
Information Office in Benghazi that there were serious threats against it, and
it was the decision of the State Department not to beef up security.
Libyan security guards outside the building
fought against the attackers, and Libyan civilians did their best to save the
ambassador, freeing him from the building he was trapped in and bringing him to
the hospital. In the aftermath, hundreds of Libyans demonstrated to show their
outrage over what had occurred and drove the al-Qaeda-linked militia believed to be
responsible for the killings out of Benghazi.
The Libyan government, such as it is and
insofar as it is capable of doing so, has fully cooperated in the investigation
while the U.S. authorities have dragged their feet.
And Rand’s last charge is completely absurd.
What government has “refused to protect our embassies”? And the video makes
clear that the “imprison[ed] citizens” claim relates to the CIA doctor in
Pakistan, Shakil Afridi, who was spying for the U.S. government. If Rand Paul
were Pakistani, how would he see it?
So it is a bad day at Black Rock. The folks
who are claiming to continue the fight for a sane foreign policy are either
doing nothing or are falling into the same old pattern of pointless
stereotyping and deliberate failure to understand why things are the way they
are.
So do you want to see Sen. Rand Paul running
for president in 2016?
Sure, why not. It would not be a change that
we can believe in because it would be no change at all.
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