Up to and during the Iraq War,
leftists across America cheered an outspoken lawmaker who characterized
the administration’s latest intervention in the Middle East as reckless
military adventurism that would backfire on the United States.
“Us rushing headlong into a war unilaterally was a mistake and may still be a mistake,” Illinois state senator Barack Obama said in late 2002 as President Bush readied Operation Iraqi Freedom. “What’s our long term commitment there? How much is it going to cost?”
“It’s time to admit that no amount of American lives can resolve the
political disagreement that lies at the heart of someone else’s civil
war,” Obama said to adoring crowds on the presidential campaign trail in
2007.
But that was then and this is now. The angry protests of the Left against the Iraq war have dissipated into the ether now that their man is in the White House.
Rushing headlong into Libya’s civil war at the behest of the United Nations is now official policy.
The “no-fly zone” the U.S. and allied countries are enforcing in Libyan airspace is an aerial blockade, which is of course an act of war. President Obama gave his blessing to this undeclared war without even having the courage to seek congressional approval.
There was no fireside chat. No live address from the Oval Office.
Obama almost literally phoned in the attack on Libya, announcing it to his fellow Americans on March 19 via an audio-taped message while he was vacationing in beautiful Brasilia,
the picturesque capital of Brazil. Yes, putting Americans in harm’s way
was so important to the proverbial leader of the free world that he
forced himself to hold off on his next caipirinha for a few minutes.
The president could have made some kind of an argument that Libya,
which President Ronald Reagan said under Qaddafi had become a “synonym
for barbarism,” is currently a threat to U.S. national security (and
Israel) but Obama hasn’t yet taken time from his busy schedule to make it. […]
(Read the whole article at FrontPage Magazine)