“A ‘Where’s Waldo’ Of GOP Leadership”: Sorting Through The Crowd, There’s No Clear Leader
This week’s Republican debate was like a “Where’s Waldo” of leadership. The subject matter discussed – national security and terrorism – is so complex, and so vast, it was tough to find the best leader on the crowded stage. And we want to find that leader. Very much. Because we’re worried and scared.
Part of the reason we feel insecure, let’s face it, is because we have no idea how to solve this problem of the murderous and determined Islamic State group. Common sense tells us that fighting on the ground in Syria and Iraq isn’t enough, or quite right, since there are Islamic State group enclaves in other countries as well as followers all over the globe. So even if we could dismantle or contain the so-called caliphate, we could still have more attacks like we had in San Bernardino and Paris. We understand that technology enables the Islamic State group’s hold to spread like a cancer, but we don’t know if there is a national security equivalent of chemotherapy.
That’s the backdrop of the “Where’s Waldo” leadership puzzle. And like a puzzle, this week’s debate contained multiple moments where we thought, “Oh, there it is!” For example, when Florida Sen. Marco Rubio explained the nuclear triad (“Yes,” we thought, “this is the type of thing I want my president to understand and be able to explain!”) or when Carly Fiorina showed us why the bureaucracy of government is “woefully inadequate” when it comes to assessing and addressing the terror threat. “Every parent in America is checking social media, and every employer is as well, but our government can’t do it?” she said. (“Yes,” we thought, “government has no common sense! We wish it did!”)
Less helpful were the nitty-gritty debates over the law. While certainly an important part of preventing terrorist attacks and bringing their perpetrators to justice, the laws governing everything from data collection to immigration must be part of an overall vision of how we deal with the Islamic State group and its followers. If we can’t see the vision, the details are just details. They obscure leadership.
When it comes to security, we ask a lot of our leaders. We need a lot. We want everything from tactics and strategy, to cues on how to think and feel about the threat, to reassurance that the bad guys are going to lose and the good guys will win.
President Ronald Reagan excelled at this during the Cold War. President George W. Bush was also very good at it in the months following 9/11. To find out who can reassure, and fight, and inspire in the age of the Islamic State group is our responsibility as voters. It will be the job of our nation in 2016 to sort through the crowd and find our Waldo – the woman or man who will someday add his or her voice and leadership to a proud presidential history that still echoes with moments like “Ich bin ein Berliner,” “tear down this wall” and “the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon.”
By: Jean Card, Thomas Jefferson Street Blog, U. S. News and World Report, December 17, 2015
December 19, 2015 Posted by raemd95 | Fearmongering, GOP Leadership, GOP Presidential Candidates, ISIS | Caliphate, Carly Fiorina, Iraq, Marco Rubio, Metadata, National Security, Syria, Terrorism | 1 Comment
“On Terrorism, Cruz Has No Idea”: By What Mystical Powers Of Clairvoyance Does Cruz Think We Can Spot The “Bad Guys”
Terrorism is not going away. We saw that in the closing of the Los Angeles schools after what was deemed a “credible” threat. The threat turned out to be not real, but with the country under heightened alarm, local authorities have become hyper-vigilant. That was 650,000 students sent or kept home.
When a good piece of time passed without a serious terrorist attack, politicians went soft. Many hawks on the right switched gears, turning on “big government” as the predominant evil and its national security programs as an assault on the privacy of innocent Americans.
With the massacres in Paris and San Bernardino, California, still in the headlines, many Americans are wondering what was so terrible about the federal bulk surveillance program that Congress ended in September. Rekindled fears of terrorism have changed the conversation.
Hence the violent pendulum swinging of Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz in Tuesday’s debate. Cruz had championed the law that stripped the National Security Agency of the power to collect the metadata of Americans’ communications. He had some explaining to do on Tuesday.
“Metadata” refers to such information as the time and length of calls and the numbers called. It does not include the content of the conversation or even names. In the now-ended program, the NSA could delve deeper only when a disturbing pattern was detected. And even then, it had to first obtain a court order.
During the debate, tweeters stuck on horse race politics thrilled to the brawl between Cruz and the other Cuban-American candidate, Marco Rubio. But there was real substance in their battle. Rubio, who supported the NSA program, came off as the man for all seasons. Cruz dissolved into frantic evasion.
What was Cruz’s reason for supporting a bill to stop the NSA program? “It ended the federal government’s bulk collection of phone metadata of millions of law-abiding citizens,” he explained.
Well, yeah. Every day, security officials at American airports inspect the baggage of over a million law-abiding citizens to find the one possibly carrying a bomb. The jihadi terrorists who have preyed on this country appeared to be law-abiding, even model, citizens. By what magical, mystical powers of clairvoyance does Cruz think we can spot the “bad guys,” as he puts them?
The candidates routinely bashed President Obama as weak on terrorism. In truth, he fought like a tiger to retain the NSA’s ability to conduct bulk surveillance. In doing so, he often butted heads with fellow Democrats jumping on the same phony privacy-rights bandwagon as did Cruz.
(Would someone please explain why an NSA computer’s going through raw metadata — a computer that doesn’t even register our names — is somehow violating our privacy? Furthermore, what is so private about information that the phone company has?)
Republican backers of the NSA program, such as Rubio and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, also had to buck their own party. As it turned out, the program was killed by a Republican-run Senate and a Republican-led House, with considerable help from Democrats.
The collection of the metadata has already ended, and soon all the information will reside with the phone companies. To get at it, the NSA will have to obtain a warrant and take it to a phone company, of which there are thousands.
The goal of protecting both security and privacy is a worthy one, but it requires two things: One is the maturity to accept the often-difficult trade-offs. The other is an understanding of what the data collection being considered actually involves.
It’s unclear how we can have security without a federal bulk surveillance program. Terrorists don’t walk around wearing neon “bad guy” signs.
By: Froma Harrop, The National Memo, December 17, 2015
December 18, 2015 Posted by raemd95 | Big Government, National Security Agency, Ted Cruz, Terrorists | Marco Rubio, Metadata, Mitch McConnell, National Security, Privacy, San Bernardino Shootings | 1 Comment
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