UPDATE, May 16: Today in South Dakota, Obama responded to Bush's remarks. Read my take here.
Yesterday, we chronicled Vice President Dick Cheney's first foray onto the 2008 campaign trail
and its catastrophic conclusion: a loss in Mississippi's scarlet red
First District for Republican Congressional wannabe Greg Davis... to a
Democrat (shudder). Now Cheney's second-in-command, President George
W. Bush, has injected himself into the race as well--and his debut is
proving to be even more spectacularly disastrous than his not-so-better
half's.
Dubya's first mistake? Choice of venue. Speaking earlier
today before the Israeli parliament in honor of the country's 60th
anniversary, Bush kicked off the festivities by acting more or less,
you know, "presidential." He spoke of America's unwavering support for
the Jewish State. He portrayed the future of the Middle East as a time
of "tolerance and integration." He reiterated his belief that democracy
would triumph over terrorism. Oh, and then he used the diplomatic forum
to launch a veiled but stinging attack on Democratic presidential
candidate Barack Obama, breaking the unwritten rule of U.S. politics
that partisan bickering stops at our water's edge. "Some seem to
believe we should negotiate with terrorists and radicals," he said in
the Knesset,
"as if some ingenious argument will persuade them they have been wrong
all along." The "some," White House aides privately confirmed
to CNN, referred to Obama, who has said that as president he will
engage in direct talks with the heads of hostile states--but has also made
it abundantly clear that he will not sit down with "terrorists and radicals" like, say, Hamas. So much for seeming presidential.
And
that was only the beginning. Turning up the heat, Bush went on
to cast himself as Winston Churchill to Obama's Neville Chamberlain,
implying that the Democratic senator favors "appeasing" terrorists much
as some Western leaders sought to appease Adolf Hitler in the run-up to
World War II. "We have heard this foolish delusion before," said Bush.
"As Nazi tanks crossed into Poland in
1939, an American senator declared: 'Lord, if only I could have talked
to Hitler, all of this might have been avoided.' We have an obligation
to call this what it is — the false comfort of appeasement, which has
been repeatedly discredited by history." Hyperbolic Nazi comparisons = never a political winner. Oy vey, indeed.
There
is, of course, a valuable debate to be had over whether the U.S.
president should agree to unconditional talks with, say, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad of Iran. But by distorting Obama's stance beyond all
recognition and using the charged context of the Knesset--along with a
handful of inappropriate historical allusions*--to not-so-subtly raise further doubts
about the Democratic candidate with Jewish Americans, Bush indicated
that he's less interested in highlighting foreign-policy differences
than in fear-mongering for political gain.
The
point, it seems, was to boost John McCain. Unfortunately for Bush--and
the GOP--the assault has proven to be pretty foolish politics.
Like children with Christmas presents, the entire Democratic
establishment
immediately ripped into the president for his remarks. "It is sad that
President
Bush would use a speech to the Knesset on the
60th anniversary of Israel's independence to launch a false political
attack," said Obama in a statement. "It is time to turn the page on
eight years of policies that have
strengthened Iran and failed to secure America or our ally Israel."
Obama communications director Robert Gibbs called Bush's swipe an
“astonishing” show of "cowboy diplomacy" and an “unprecedented
political attack on foreign soil.” "Beneath the dignity of the office,"
said Nancy Pelosi; "Does the president have no shame?" asked Rahm
Emanuel. DNC Chairman Howard Dean demanded that McCain "denounce
these remarks in the strongest terms possible.” And Joe Biden summed up
the situation in typically Bidenesque terms. "This is bulls**t," he
said in a Senate hallway. "This is malarkey."
Whether
or not Dubya's history lesson was, indeed, "malarkey," the Dems are smart
to treat it like a big, shiny gift from Santa Claus. As the New
Republic's Christopher Orr puts it,
"Bush attacking Obama, and Obama counter-attacking Bush, while John
McCain sits on the sidelines, is a disastrous dynamic for the GOP. The
more Obama can frame this race as him vs. the most unpopular president
in modern history, the easier a time he'll have in the fall." Before,
Obama had to tie McCain to Bush to accomplish this task--and it was often a stretch, seeing as the Arizona
senator has broken with the administration on issues like global
warming and even Iraq strategy. But now that Bush has
entered the ring himself, Obama can finally fight the opponent he's
been itching to fight all along.
McCain, for his part, is left in an awkward position. After Bush's Knesset kvetching
caught fire this morning in Washington, D.C., White House spokeswoman
Dana Perino contradicted what aides had already told CNN and insisted
that her boss wasn't referring to Obama. "There are many who have
suggested these types of negotiations with
people that the president, President Bush, thinks that we should not
talk to," she informed reporters in Jerusalem. With that in mind, then,
there are only two explanations for Bush's "who, me?" defense, and both
align with the worst criticisms of his character: either he's too dumb
to realize that the entire world would hear his comments as a swipe at
Obama--highly unlikely--or he's being disingenuous. Hours later in
Columbus, Ohio, McCain told the press
that "he took the White House at its word"--a diplomatic response--and then pivoted to hit
Obama himself. "This does bring up an issue that we will be discussing
with the
American people," he said, "and that is why does Barack Obama, Senator
Obama, want
to sit down with a state sponsor of terrorism?" Unlike Bush, McCain was
honestly characterizing Obama's position and indicating an interest in
substantive debate. But don't expect Biden, Pelosi, Dean, Emanuel--or
Obama--to make that distinction for him in the fall. They'll simply say
he embraced the radioactive president--implying that he must be either dumb or disingenuous
himself.
In other words, "more of the same."
UPDATE, 5:17 p.m.: Another negative effect on McCain: Bush's remarks stepped all over his major speech this morning, which "was billed
by his campaign as one of his most important to date and a
summary of sorts of the past two months of policy addresses and
promises." Although the McCain camp probably doesn't mind Bush putting
Obama on the defensive re: a touchy subject like Israel, that benefit
doesn't outweigh the costs of 1) having the day's message, which was
geared toward independents, completely drowned out and 2) being forced
instead to play sidekick to the most unpopular president in modern
history--a sure turn-off for the very independents that McCain was
supposed to spend the day courting.
* UPDATE, 5:34 p.m.: Why is the Nazi comparison inappropriate in this context? Blogger Matt Eckel of Foreign Policy Watch sums it up nicely:
Any benefits of Munich as an instructive historical precedent are now
far outweighed by the analogy's power as an intellectually lazy
rhetorical cudgel that is too often used to bludgeon any diplomatic
initiatives that are, well, diplomatic. Not every autocratic country is
Nazi Germany. Not every foreign dictator we don't like is Hitler. Not
every threatening situation is most appropriately handled by eschewing
diplomacy in favor of a "firm stance." ... Iran is not Nazi Germany. Though the Iranian regime is anti-democratic,
and espouses values that are indeed antithetical to those of the
liberal West, the notion that Iranian armies and proxies are poised to
make a genocidal sweep across the Middle East is absurd. Even the
Iranian nuclear threat, though serious, shows every sign of being able
to be contained with an intelligent deterrence policy (should things
come to that). Iran does not have a particularly impressive industrial
base. Its infrastructure is mediocre, its economy is sclerotic (propped
up only by high oil prices), and its regime is unpopular. Even the
outrageous statements about Israel made by President Ahmadinejad should
be taken with a grain of salt, remembering that the Iranian President
is not the head of state, and that he is acutally at odds with much of
Iran's clerical leaders.