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Gary Bauer Reports: Mixed Messages On Iraq, New Low On Foreign Policy And More


Wednesday, June 18, 2014

To: Friends & Supporters

From: Gary L. Bauer

Mixed Messages On Iraq

The Wall Street Journal reports today that the Obama Administration has once again ruled out immediate air strikes in Iraq. This afternoon, congressional leaders will meet with the president at the White House, where he is expected to lay out his “comprehensive strategy,” which may “potentially” include a military component.

Meanwhile, ISIS jihadists have laid siege to Iraq’s largest oil refinery. Iraq is OPEC’s second-largest producer, and the attack spooked oil markets. Gas prices in the U.S. are approaching a six-year high at a time when experts predicted they would be falling.

NBC News reports that foreign policy experts and members of Congress are stunned by the administration’s inept response to the crisis in Iraq. Some are trying to blame the intelligence community. But there were plenty of warning signs that this jihadist menace was coming.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki was in Washington last October warning about ISIS, which was described even then as a “transnational threat network.” Two months after Maliki’s visit, Fallujah fell.

In the weeks that followed, he repeatedly begged for U.S. air strikes. The White House repeatedly refused. Now major oil facilities and the Iraqi capital are under siege. Whatever the administration does, if anything, may be too little too late. The consequences of inaction could be another disaster for U.S. foreign policy and national security.

“What Took So Long?”

That seems to be the general reaction to yesterday’s news that U.S. special forces captured Ahmed Abu Khatallah, an alleged ringleader in the 2012 Benghazi attacks. In fact, CNN asks that very question in an article headlined, “Hiding In Plain Sight.” The report notes: “[Khatallah] didn’t hide in the months after the September 11, 2012, assault on a U.S. diplomatic compound, instead giving media interviews in public…”

Fox News reporter James Rosen pressed State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki yesterday about this issue, asking whether U.S. special forces should have posed as journalists to capture Khatalla. In a testy exchange, Rosen said, “You’re still not answering the central question, Jen. You’re not answering the question of why a reporter was able to get within six inches of this guy, and U.S. special forces weren’t for more than two years.”

But according to the New York Times, a plan to capture Khattala “was on Obama’s desk awaiting approval” … “for more than year.”

New Low On Foreign Policy

Two new polls — Gallup and NBC News/Wall Street Journal — find President Obama’s approval rating at 41%. But events overseas are clearly taking their toll. According to the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll:

 

 

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