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Friday, February 12, 2010

Our Top Anti-Terrorism Advisor Must Go

Partisanship, Then and Now

One of the stranger behaviors of the ever-stranger Obama administration is its sudden adoption of the "wounded fawn" posture.

No opposition was more stridently critical of a sitting president than was the anti-Bush Left. Barack Obama, as candidate and president, could not start a speech without saying "Bush did it." And have we forgotten the 2006–08 canonization of Michael Moore, the silence about the Nazi slurs, the award-winning assassination docudramas, the Knopf novel about killing George Bush, the "General Betray Us" ad, Al Gore's vein-bulging "brownshirts" outburst, and on and on?

But suddenly, pundits and politicians have embraced a new gospel about conciliation and the need to restrain harsh discourse — which is fine, but many of these advocates for a gentler, kinder dialogue were bomb-throwers just a few years ago.

And now we hear from none other than John Brennan, the Obama-administration counterterrorism expert, who soberly sermonizes on the lamentable politicization of the war on terror, and particularly the popular derision of the decision to treat the Christmas-day airliner plot as a normal criminal-justice matter.

But isn't Brennan the same official who used to give loud political speeches, heralding not only the superior new Obama anti-terrorism methodology but also the failings of the Bush approach (which kept us safe for seven consecutive years)?

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

not only him but all the anti american bums in washington got to go! and a few others.

Anonymous said...

The whole administration (and congress) must go if America is to survive.

Anonymous said...

John Brennan was the Director of the National Counterterrorism center under George W. Bush from 2004 to 2005. In fact, he was the first director of the center, and was handpicked by Bush. Now, like everything else Republicans do, you don't like him because a Democrat is in the White House. Why weren't you calling for his resignation in 2004?