Today, around 2PM, Mitt Romney is addressing the
annual conference of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. He’s expected to
lay out the broad strokes of his foreign policy platform. His
speech at the summit preludes the international
leg of his campaign, when he’ll travel to Britain, Israel
and Poland to secure international aegis as the conservative
candidate for president.
Last week, I expressed my hope that
Romney will spare a war-weary American electorate the jingoism that’s
defined his foreign policy statements, thus far. The discussion
prompted a thoughtful response from
our own Jim Antle, some challenging consideration from
Daniel Larison at the American Conservative, and some
typically provocative thoughts from
Andrew Sullivan at the Daily Beast.
Today, in preview of Romney’s talk, Jennifer Rubin posits that
Romney’s foreign policy is the “opposite” of President Obama’s. If
we’re talking in terms of political geometry — perhaps identifying
the shape, size, and scope of Romney’s policy priorities — then
I’d beg to differ with the Post’s conservative
cognoscente. However, Ms. Rubin does offer an adroit summation of
reality:
Moreover, unlike Barack Obama, who came to the
presidency with sky-high expectations (and was promptly awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize for doing nothing), Romney may benefit from more
realistic and limited expectations. He would come to the White
House with fewer budget resources and less public appetite for an
interventionist foreign policy than did George W. Bush. Romney also
has the benefit from lessons learned from the Bush and Obama
administrations.
How he’ll balance these fundamental realities with the Cold War
chatter we’ve heard thus far remains at question. Perhaps we’ll
have a better idea after his 2PM, but if I was writing this speech,
I’d stick to hammering the president for leaking secrets of state
— better known as “top-fold headlines” for the current
administration.