It’s difficult not to view the president’s surprise visit to
Afghanistan as little more than just another domestic political
campaign ploy. The trip, after all, comes only a day after the
president and his reelection team tried to make political hay out
of the Navy Seals’ killing of bin Laden.
Obama, moreover, long ago abandoned any pretense to governing
and has said disconcertingly little about Afghanistan.
Sure, in 2009 he announced a troop surge — but only after
dithering for months while the situation there deteriorated. Worse
yet, at the very time Obama ordered more troops into battle, he was
undercutting them by announcing a date certain for their
withdrawal. He then fired the commanding general there, Stanley
McChrystal, because McChrystal expressed some mild disappointment
in his civilian chain of command.
Gen. Petraeus (and later Gen. Allen) took over in Afghanistan
and Obama has since all but forgotten about the place — except to
announce that we will be leaving soon, in 2014. And now, all of a
sudden, while in the midst of a fierce reelection campaign, the
president trumpets “his” killing of bin Laden (sic) right before
descending into Kabul.
His
message: peace in our time.
My fellow Americans, we have traveled through more than a decade
under the dark cloud of war. Yet here, in the pre-dawn darkness of
Afghanistan, we can see the light of a new day on the horizon. The
Iraq War is over. The number of our troops in harm’s way has been
cut in half, and more will be coming home soon. We have a clear
path to fulfill our mission in Afghanistan, while delivering
justice to al Qaeda.
Maybe, but with the Islamic world in turmoil, Syria in flames,
the Iranian mullahs still in power, and al Qaeda far from dead, it
may be premature to say that America’s decade of war has passed.
Obama is basking in the glow of successes initiated by his
predecessor, George W. Bush. But there remain a host of problems —
including Iraq and Afghanistan, Iran and North Korea — that Obama
has bequeathed to his successor, Mitt Romney.