seamusTX wrote:The Annoyed Man wrote:I nominate General David Petreaus.....the closest thing to an Eisenhower this country currently has.
Of course military officers are not elected, but at the rank of major, colonel, or above they are very much politicians. They spend quite a bit of time dealing with congressional committees and the civilian sector of the Department of Defense.
Also military officers while wearing the uniform rarely reveal their political leanings. There have been some surprises when they retired and got into politics. I don't often hear Colin Powell's name mentioned these days.
- Jim
I agree with you in general....no pun intended. One cannot be a 4 star general officer in a post requiring Senate confirmation without having at least a finely tuned understanding of politics—whether one has any personal political ambitions or not. But I've been a follower of General Petraeus's for several years now, and I have great respect for his abilities.
Like most field grade officers, he holds his political views close to his vest. It is beyond credulity to assume that he has none. However, Bob Dole urged Petraeus back in 2009 to consider a presidential run as a republican (
SOURCE). On the other hand, Max Fisher at The Atlantic Monthly thinks that Petraeus is a big government liberal because of his actions in "nation building" in Iraq (
SOURCE):
If we're going to play Washington's favorite parlor game, we might as well ask the inevitable question: Would Petraeus really run as a Republican? Testifying Tuesday before the Senate Armed Services Committee, he articulated policy positions on Don't Ask, Don't Tell and the Bagram detention facility that sounded like planks of the Democratic, not Republican, platform. That's just the beginning of his surprisingly liberal politics:
- Says "the time has come" to consider repealing don't ask, don't tell.
- Opposes sending Guantanamo detainees to the Bagram facility in Afghanistan.
- Supports closing the prison at Guantanamo.
- Opposes "enhanced interrogation" methods like waterboarding.
- Condemns Israel's behavior in the Palestinian conflict as undermining U.S. regional interests.
- Soft on drugs: Has made combating Afghanistan's massive opium trade a low priority.
- Soft on crime: Supports reconciling with Taliban leaders and backed Sunni militias in Iraq's Sunni Awakening.
- Worst of all, he's a big-government liberal: His strategy in Iraq relied on numerous population-centric strategies that are called counterinsurgency when deployed inside a war zone but, if implemented in the U.S., would be called social welfare programs on the scale of FDR's Works Progress Administration or Johnson's Great Society. Petraeus uses government resources to put unemployed locals to work on massive infrastructure projects, he works hard to secure fair political representation for aggrieved minorities, and he builds strong, public social services like hospitals and schools. President Reagan's edict, "government is not the solution to our problems; government is the problem," doesn't seem to hold for Petraeus in Iraq. Would it hold for Petraeus in Washington?
Of course, some of the general's Democratic policies could simply reflect that the president is a Democrat and Petraeus respects the chain of command. But it's worth considering that this potential one-day Republican presidential hopeful might be hopeful, and he could even be presidential, but he doesn't look so Republican.
My answer to Fisher is: there is a huge difference between nation-building in a war torn country in your capacity as the top military officer on the ground and at the behest of presidents who are big-government presidents, and the exercise of one's own political philosophy.
I think that integrity counts as much as anything else in a president. Obama has none. Petraeus is the embodiment of it. I suspect that Petraeus is probably not a hard-core rock-ribbed conservative. However, he is one person who, if he were president, I would not worry about our national security or bungling our foreign relations.
Anyway, I could think of others, but I like Petraeus. He's a leader. That is something we have lacked in the White House, going back to Reagan.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
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