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Exposed: Ron Paul's Foreign Policy Ignorance and Naivety
by Raymond Ibrahim http://www.raymondibrahim.com/10329/exposed-ron-paul-foreign-policy-ignorance Among other qualities, a good presidential candidate must be knowledgeable and able to think outside the box; equally important, he must not be naïve or gullible — certainly not swallow everything the enemy says hook, line, and sinker.
During the recent Republican candidate debate, Congressman Ron Paul exhibited his ignorance and gullibility when the panel was asked "Do you plan to decrease Defense spending, to balance spending, or do you believe high spending is essential to security?" After Paul explained how he was "tired of all the militarism that we are involved in," and his plan on cutting back, he said, "But we're under great threat, because we occupy so many countries…. The purpose of al Qaeda was to attack us, invite us over there, where they can target us…. but we're there occupying their land. And if we think that we can do that and not have retaliation, we're kidding ourselves." This is, of course, an old and well known narrative. By questioning Paul, however, Rick Santorum exposed the latter's problematic foreign policy approach:
After rejecting Santorum's thesis, Paul made his fatal blunder:
This exchange clearly revealed Paul's lack of knowledge concerning the nature of the enemy. It's one thing for some Americans to believe that the source of all conflict is the United State's presence in some countries, it's quite another for a potential president to think, and speak, this way. Ironically, Paul even contradicted himself: minutes earlier, when discussing the need to cut back on the military, he complained that we had a military presence in 130 countries — bringing to mind the question: if U.S. military presence is the source of problems, why haven't these countries lashed out? But what's worse is Paul's naivety — that he would actually swallow and regurgitate verbatim the propaganda al-Qaeda has been dishing for years, to wit, "Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda have been explicit — they have been explicit, and they wrote and said"; and "I'm trying to get you to understand what the motive was behind the bombing." Did it ever occur to the Congressman that al-Qaeda could be, um, lying? Had he bothered to juxtapose al-Qaeda's propaganda to the West — which indeed does amount to blaming U.S. foreign policy for their terrorism — with the other things "they wrote and said," he would learn their ultimate motives. For example, for all his talk that U.S. "occupation" is the heart of the problem, shortly after the 9/11 strikes, Osama bin Laden wrote in confidence to fellow Muslims:
This medieval threefold choice, then — conversion, subjugation, or the sword — is the ultimate source of conflict, not U.S foreign policy (see also "Reciprocal Treatment or Religious Obligation" which compares al-Qaeda's messages to the West with its internal messages to Muslims, documenting all the contradictions). The good news is that, if Paul is ignorant and naïve regarding al-Qaeda and its motives, based on all the loud booing he received, increasing numbers of Americans are not. receive the latest by email: subscribe to raymond ibrahim's free mailing list |
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