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Are We More Secure Now Than Four Years Ago?
March 18, 2004
As we mark the one-year anniversary of the U.S. invasion of
Iraq, George W. Bush has made national security the foundation
of his reelection effort. To no one’s surprise, the
self-proclaimed “war president”
is running on a theme of “steady
leadership for changing times.” Given the
traditional advantage the GOP has enjoyed with voters on
defense and national security issues, the formula for electoral
success seems straightforward: “President Bush made America
safer.”
Except that it’s not true.
John Kerry and the Democrats can ask the American people a
simple question: are you more secure now than four years ago?
As with the economy, the
answer won’t be welcome news to President Bush.
Security and Myopia |
This is not to say that the Bush administration is completely
unjustified in making claims of progress in the war on terror
and enhancing American security. In Afghanistan, the Taliban
regime was quickly toppled, and its remnants sent fleeing to the
mountains bordering Pakistan. While Osama Bin Laden, Ayman
Al-Zawahiri and Mullah Omar remain at large, Al Qaeda’s
leadership ranks have been damaged and disrupted, with up to
two-thirds of key personnel killed or captured. The current
Iraqi quagmire aside, Saddam Hussein’s regime has been
overthrown, and the brutal dictator captured. In Libya, the
Qaddafi regime has sought renewed relations with the West,
abandoning its nuclear program and acknowledging culpability for
the Pan Am Lockerbie bombing. (This sea change, however, is
apparently due more to months of joint American/British
diplomacy, rather than the deterrent effect of the Iraq
invasion.) And at home, the creation of the Department of
Homeland Security and heightened preparation by state and local
first responders mean, at least on paper, that the nation is
better prepared to prevent or respond to domestic terrorist
threats.
There is, however, a powerful and persuasive case to be made
that the United States is now more vulnerable to attack at home
and abroad under President Bush’s guidance. Bush’s wartime
leadership has left America’s military overstretched, its
network of alliances weakened, its credibility diminished, its
international appeal in tatters and homeland defense in chaos.
While the U.S. is bogged down in Iraq and an undersized American
force hunts for Bin Laden, the Madrid bombings show Al Qaeda is
still capable of delivering lethal blows. And all the while,
festering threats and conflicts in Israel, North Korea, Taiwan,
remain on a short fuse.
Skip Ahead
- Security and Myopia
- Insecurity Begins at Home
- Not Fighting the Good Fight
- Losing the Battle for Hearts
and Minds
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