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DEFCON What? The War Quality of a Candidate

"Sir, wake up. An event has occurred."

I didn't have to open my eyes to recognize the voice. Not the individual, but the type. Young, male. military, calm but urgent. Which meant that something somewhere had gone very wrong, very fast, and could get worse if nothing was done soon or the wrong choice was made. I sighed, swung my legs over the side of the bed onto the floor and got up.

And I was alone in my bedroom at home. There was no one there at all. A dream had awakened me.

Thinking about that dream, I gave up trying to sort out specifics, but chewed on a few generalities in my mind. And one of those is what it means to be President of the United States.

One of the more stupid charges tossed out from time to time, is to try to insult the President for taking "vacation". That word is a misnomer, because Presidents do not get the chance to get away from the job and relax. The plain fact is, Presidents never get vacations; even former Presidents find that they cannot simply visit a mall or take in a movie - the current culture requires advance planning for even the most mundane activity - ask Bill Clinton how easy it is for him to go to a McDonald's these days, or G.H.W. Bush to decide on the spur of the moment to go golfing. And for the sitting President, that "vacation" is all work. All it really means is a change of location, and some pretty scenery - a lot of people are clueless to how often Presidents hold private conferences with key foreign and Congressional leaders while on "vacation"; Carter's Egypt-Israel peace treaty started with phone conversations during one of Carter's "vacations". Dubya has met with Tony Blair, Ariel Sharon, Prime Minister Koizumi, and many other leaders while on "vacation". And do I really need to remind the reader that every President, regardless of party or circumstance, is never far from the "football" or aides who will not hesitate to inform him of serious events? You know, now I think about it it's no wonder no President ever had a child conceived while he was in office - the knowledge that a Secret Service agent could enter without any warning would "kill the mood" for anybody. Well, almost anybody.

But getting back to the topic under discussion, when Americans are choosing a President, it is important to realize that the war condition of the nation is a critical factor. I would suggest that when people are worried about conflict, they are less likely to consider changing the party in leadership, but when things are relaxed and going well in national security terms, they will consider alternatives more readily. Sometimes the more competent leader is seen in the light of who can lead effectively in time of war. In other times, war seems unpopular or irrelevant and a war leader is less respected than an economic leader. With that in mind, consider the war qualifications of the following failed candidates:

Dewey 1948 Economic leader, not seen as a war leader
Stevenson 1952, 1956 Intellectual, not a war leader
Nixon 1960, 1968 Not seen as a war leader, hurt him in 1960 but
helped him in 1968 (seen as war leader in 1972)
Goldwater 1964 Depicted as emotional and unstable
Humphrey 1968 Not seen as a war leader
McGovern 1972 Not seen as a war leader
Ford 1976 Not seen as a war leader (given Vietnam and Carter's Navy experience)
Carter 1980 Seen as militarily incompetent
Mondale 1984 Not seen as a war leader
Dukakis 1988 Not seen as a war leader
Bush 1992 War experience seen as irrelevant
Dole 1996 War experience seen as irrelevant
Gore 2000 Not seen as a war leader
Kerry 2004 Not seen as a war leader

This overly-simple description of these men is not meant to slap them, but examine them in the context of their election year. Truman looked tougher than Dewey, General Eisenhower more than Stevenson, former Navy officer JFK over Nixon, reasonable Nixon over indecisive Humphrey or partisan Wallace, war-hardened Nixon over McGovern, reasonable Carter over reflexive Ford, decisive Reagan over timid Carter and Mondale, war veteran GHW Bush over wanna-be Dukakis, peacetime-priorities Clinton over war relics Bush and Dole, "Dubya" Bush tougher than Al "Treeman" Gore.

It's probably too soon to get an accurate fix on the 2004 election, though. Did Bush win over Kerry because Bush was seen as tougher than Kerry, who trotted out tired old overdone stories whenever he wanted to sell his cred, or was it that Kerry seemed to dwell on Iraq all the time, while Bush seemed more reasonable talking about job growth and Social Security reform? I have a sneaking suspicion that Bush carried more cred than Kerry because of his record - what moron thought you could sell a ex-Vietnam protestor as a war hero? But I also suspect that Bush sold his case in more than one dimension, while Kerry droned on about magic hats and his wounded pride.

In conclusion, it seems to me that we are all aware that every single President is awakened sooner or later by that aide or young officer. And we elect Presidents in some measure on the assumption of how they will address the issue. The optimal candidate will have the foresight to anticipate the crisis; the wisdom to place the best-qualified officials to address the specific needs and to trust them to know their job; the intelligence and diligence to develop a plan and make changes or adjustments as necessary; and the courage to stand - alone if necessary - behind the plan through its completion. In retrospect, the decisions of the past elections make these points clear, and it is significant to consider who, among the many who want the job, is really capable to carry that burden in the next Administration.

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Comments (3)

"what moron thought you cou... (Below threshold)

"what moron thought you could sell a ex-Vietnam protestor as a war hero"

That would be the Democratic party...and they damn near pulled it off. I think I've just about convinced myself that I'm going to have to buy a gun (that would be for defense not offense if it's not obvious) if a Democrat is elected president any time soon. I don't harbor any illusions about where I live being a big X on the map for terrorists or anything. I don't have any delusions of grandeur. I'm sorry, I try to be reasonable about the whole thing, but they worry me when they talk about suicidal jihadists that want to kill us all as deserving the same treatment as a citizen of this country caught burglarizing a dollar store. I don't live that far from NYC. I live near Albany where, regardless of whether they get off in this case and how reliable the original tip was on the guys, two muslims, including an imam of a local mosque, agreed to help a plant buy a shoulder fired missile or rocket for the express purpose of shooting down a passenger airliner...whether they knew what it looked like before they saw it, whether the phone calls they keep making to terrorist groups are just becuase they 'went to college with them'...I don't care about any of it...when someone sat down with them and said, hey, I know how we can make some money, we'll fund the purchase of a missile that will be used to shoot down a passenger jet, they said "yes". When I read a quote from Nancy Pelosi about how a law that Republicans are trying to pass, as suggested by the Supreme Court, to give some sort of civilized trial to these non- US citizen monsters (as opposed to lining them up against a wall or some such) is destructive to the Constitution (which, last I checked, dealt with the rights of Americans)...well, I should know better, but I fear for our citizens. They tried to deal with Hitler and he proved that the only response was to crush him. They tried to deal with N. Vietnam...and when we didn't crush them millions were killed. There are some people you just can't deal with. Is there anyone that cannot be 'dealt with diplomatically' to liberals? Apart from conervatives of course, who should simply be thrown in jail.

For the record, and I've said it before, it's not the Republicans that make me scared...it's the people that saw the heads off of their 'prisoners' and the people that want to deal with the people that saw the heads off their 'prisoners' as a regular Joe that scare me. It's not what George Bush or Dick Cheney says about the jihadists that scares me, it's what the jihadists actually do just about every day in the middle east and who the Democrats blame when it happens that scares me. So I guess I'm just trying to scare people too by pointing out the factual things that Democrats say and do and what the jihadists actually do. Reminds me of how the Democrats completely blew up when a Republican showed up on the floor of the House with an actual picture of the targeted ANWR site and accused him of misleading people.

I would add that Bush in 20... (Below threshold)
yetanotherjohn:

I would add that Bush in 2000 was not seen as a war leader.

I have been bemusing the alternate history notion of what if Clinton had decided that he was going to secure his place in histary by making terrorism as prevalent as piracy is today. In other words, a big problem in the past, but not going forward. And lets just further speculate that after 1996, he determined that Gore being his successor was a big part of Clinton's legacy also, so he let Gore actually or appear to have a significant role in the war on terrorism. Lots of potential changes with such a thought. But I keep stumbling on the basic inherent aspects of the mindset that draws people into the democratic party and keep concluding that the modern democrat just wouldn't have the resolve to win the war on terrorism.

The difficulty Democrats co... (Below threshold)

The difficulty Democrats continue to face convincing voters they could be effective as President is that they can't get nominated by the moonbat wing which dominates their party if they show any sign of strength. They all have to do the tap-dance, promising to consult closely with France and submit our national security needs to the criminal class that controls the UN.

As long as the left dominates the Democratic Party, it will be difficult to trust them with national security.




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