Daniel Greenfield’s new Freedom Center pamphlet, The Great Betrayal:
Obama’s Wars and the War in Iraq, is an effort to understand the
politics of the “war on terror” which has now reached a final
punctuation point with the U.S. decision to speed its withdrawal from
the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan (where success was once
deemed so crucial to national security), and to practice an
incoherent form of regime change in Libya while ignoring more serious
threats in Syria and Iran.
The war on terror began, Greenfield shows, as an admirable bipartisan
commitment soon after the tragedy of 9/11—an effort to transcend
party lines not only to punish those who attacked our country but
also to interrupt planning for further attacks and try to stop the
international spread of the Islamic jihad behind the attacks. But
the Democratic Party, with the honorable exception of a few
individuals like Richard Gephardt and Joe Lieberman, turned its back
on a war soon after authorizing it, and did so at a time when
American troops were facing hostile enemy fire.
Although Senate Democrats on the intelligence oversight committee had
been granted access to every piece of data available to the White
House, they now accused President Bush of tricking them to secure
their approval. In fact, their own about-face was entirely dictated
by political considerations when a Sixties antiwar activist, Howard
Dean, surged ahead in the Democratic primary polls and it appeared
for a moment that Americans were on the side of retreat and
capitulation.
Although regime change in Iraq had been official U.S. policy since
Bill Clinton signed the Iraq Liberation Act of 1998, Democratic
senators such as John Kerry who only months earlier had supported the
war effort now launched demoralizing attacks on the American
commander-in-chief and his troops in the field, stigmatizing it
as “the wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time.” If the truth
was the first casualty of their war against the Bush administration,
the second casualty was the principle of bi-partisanship that had
guided foreign policy debates throughout the Cold War, the principle
that “politics stops at the water’s edge.” Now partisan politics
trumped security.
The unrestrained attacks on the Iraq War as illegal and unjustified
went largely unanswered by Republicans who failed to call the
Democratic saboteurs of the nation’s war effort to account or to
decry the risk their cynical attacks posed to American servicemen and
women on the battlefield. As Greenfield demonstrates, the Democrats’
partisanship had consequences not only in Iraq but elsewhere in the
region: the paralysis that resulted from their “anti-war” campaign
led straight to the destruction of Lebanon and the installation of a
terrorist army, Hezbollah, there as a regime within a regime. And it
emboldened an overtly Islamofascist regime in Iran not only to supply
the IEDs responsible for most of our troop fatalities in Iraq but
also to proceed with a nuclear program aimed directly at Israel and
the West.
The Great Betrayal shows that Barack Obama’s abandonment of Iraq is a
betrayal of all the Americans and Iraqis who gave their lives to
establish freedom in that country. And the result of his policies in
Afghanistan has been as disastrous. While the President presented
his rationale for the pursuing war there as the pursuit of al-Qaeda,
after abandoning his “surge” (which resulted in two thirds of all
America’s Afghan casualties there and the resurgence of the Taliban
allies of al-Qaeda), he blithely prepared for withdrawal as if
national objectives had been met.
Read The Great Betrayal below or order
your copy today by clicking here.