By George H. Wittman on 6.5.07 @ 12:03AM
Presidential candidates need to get serious about our national security challenges.
With all the candidates declaring (and not yet declaring) their
intentions to run for the highest office in the United States,
there is some question as to how much thought each of them have
given to the national security problems the nation will face during
the next administration.
Of course all of the aspirants have evolved quick debate
responses to the serious questions of illegal immigration and
terrorism -- and some actually know what they are talking about.
But how much have they considered the long list of other
challenging and dangerous issues that could be facing the
nation?
If Iran is not stopped in the next year and a half, the next
president will have to deal with a nuclear-armed Persia with an
ambitious agenda for extending Shia leverage in Iraq and throughout
the Middle East. And what is worse, Russia appears in no way
disposed toward restricting Iran in any fashion.
Russia, itself, is swiftly returning to its earlier preferences
toward challenging the U.S. and the West on every issue it can in
spite of extensive efforts by Washington and the European Union to
find reasonable accommodations. Clearly, if this tendency
continues, the next president will have to face a massively rearmed
and aggressive Russia.
China, of course, is not unaware of Russia's tendencies to seek
to exert its muscle. Beijing is modernizing its substantial arsenal
of nuclear weapons including mobile land-based ICBMs in addition to
its enhanced fleet of nuclear submarines. From a strategic
standpoint China's considerable investment in modern weapon
technology must be considered a message to both Moscow and
Washington.
Beijing has also made clear its intention to extend its
political and economic reach in Africa. The increased import
requirements of the contemporary Chinese state are enormous,
especially as regard raw materials of all types. Its impact on the
world petroleum market already has had an effect. By 2008-2012 the
role China will play in the world petroleum market definitely will
be come part of the Washington-Beijing trade and finance
equation.
Sometime during the next administration the U.S. will have to
deal aggressively with an increasingly antagonistic presence in
Latin America of leftist political leaders. Hugo Chavez, for one,
already has shown signs of seeking to assume the mantle of the aged
and ill Fidel Castro as the chief antagonist of the hated
capitalist United States.
Chavez has indicated his willingness to reach out
internationally to the likes of Iran's Ahmadinejad in an effort to
enhance his international status. The question now exists as to how
far Venezuela's paratrooper president is willing to go to twist
Washington's tail and what will the next president do about it?
The ramifications of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will
linger on long after the departing Bush administration, no matter
the degree to which American military presence is cut back. Al
Qaeda in one form or another will still seek to terrorize the U.S.
and the West. Pakistan will have to face the reality of its own
dangerous internal conflicts, and the next American president will
have to handle that "sticky wicket."
It would take an extraordinary optimist to perceive a near-term
future involving Israel and Palestine that is much more peaceful
and closer to settlement. No American president is going to be able
to wave a wand and make that problem disappear -- and that's the
situation used by Islam's radicals to keep the Middle East on a
boil.
Lest we forget, North Korea has shown it still has the ability
to make the Northwest Pacific dance around to its tune any time
Pyongyang wishes to shoot off a few missiles. Its existing nuclear
weapon program is the only real leverage it has. Any delay in
rolling back its current small stockpile works to its strategic
advantage.
These are only some of the many international issues facing our
next commander-in-chief. Who among the many are the best qualified
to deal with these myriad concerns? Do they really have the ability
to take on this grueling job that has left so many of the past
presidents aged far beyond their years? And we haven't yet begun to
consider the domestic issues to be faced.
Well, candidate, are you really ready to be president? Are you
really?
topics:
Trade, Islam, Military, Iraq, Iran, Russia, Israel, Pakistan, European Union, Africa, North Korea, Immigration, Nuclear Weapons, Oil