Bin laden: does obama's boasting cross the line?

Bin laden: does obama's boasting cross the line?

Play all audios:

Loading...

“Is Barack Obama trying to become the most polarizing president since Richard Nixon?” asked _THE WALL STREET JOURNAL_ in an editorial. In his re-election campaign’s most controversial TV ad yet, former President Bill Clinton praises Obama’s cool courage in ordering the raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound a year ago this week. That “victory lap” is tasteless enough, but the ad goes further, questioning whether GOP challenger Mitt Romney would have had the guts to do the same. The evidence for this scurrilous attack? Romney’s 2007 statement that “it’s not worth moving heaven and earth, spending billions of dollars just to get one person,” and his criticism that same year of Obama’s promise to go into Pakistan to kill terrorists without that country’s consent. Romney later clarified that the U.S. should of course search for bin Laden, predicting “he will die.” The desperate Obama team, however, chose to cherry-pick his quotes. With the economy still in shambles, and Obamacare unpopular, the killing of bin Laden “is the only thing this president can campaign on.” Imagine that: A politician so cynical he’d politicize national security, said MICHELLE COTTLE in _THEDAILYBEAST.COM_. Of course, that includes “every fricking Republican who has run for office since 2001.” The Republican Party, let’s not forget, spent most of a decade boasting that President Bush and the GOP had “kept us safe,” even though 9/11 occurred on their watch, and raising the specter of “terrorists at the door” if a Democrat ever won an election. Obama earned the right to boast, said FRED KAPLAN in _SLATE.COM_. The decision to send SEALs into Pakistan to kill bin Laden was hardly a “no-brainer.” The CIA had put the odds of Osama even being in the compound between 40 and 60 percent. Obama’s top advisers, including Defense Secretary Robert Gates, were recommending a safer but less conclusive B-2 bomber or drone attack. The president overruled them, at his own immense political risk. If that kind of calm judgment under pressure isn’t something voters should consider in November, what is? It certainly doesn’t give Obama the right to lie, said CONOR FRIEDERSDORF in _THEATLANTIC.COM_. When Romney criticized then-candidate Obama’s pledge to violate Pakistani airspace to take out terrorists, Romney only questioned the wisdom of making the pledge so _publicly._ Besides, if any president deserves credit, it’s George W. Bush, said former CIA interrogator JOSE RODRIGUEZ in _THE WASHINGTON POST_. It was Bush’s decision to send captured terrorists to CIA “black sites’’ for “enhanced interrogation” that led us to bin Laden—policies that have since been “denigrated by Obama as unproductive and contrary to American principles.” SUBSCRIBE TO THE WEEK Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives. SUBSCRIBE & SAVE SIGN UP FOR THE WEEK'S FREE NEWSLETTERS From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. That’s a lie by a “war criminal” trying to justify his direct participation in torture, said ANDREW SULLIVAN in _THEDAILYBEAST.COM_. The U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee reviewed millions of pages of evidence and concluded that torture did not lead us to bin Laden. Republicans are now freaking out because Bush and Cheney failed to get bin Laden over seven thuggish years, while Obama—a liberal!—rightly takes credit for dumping his carcass in the sea. Say what you will about Obama, said JON MEACHAM in _TIME.COM_, he’s proved time and again to be “a steely commander in chief,” with a real killer instinct. He’s turned foreign policy from a Democratic weakness into a Democratic strength, “and the ferocious, sputtering Republican reaction is proof positive that they know it.” A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com

“Is Barack Obama trying to become the most polarizing president since Richard Nixon?” asked _THE WALL STREET JOURNAL_ in an editorial. In his re-election campaign’s most controversial TV ad


yet, former President Bill Clinton praises Obama’s cool courage in ordering the raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound a year ago this week. That “victory lap” is tasteless enough, but the ad


goes further, questioning whether GOP challenger Mitt Romney would have had the guts to do the same. The evidence for this scurrilous attack? Romney’s 2007 statement that “it’s not worth


moving heaven and earth, spending billions of dollars just to get one person,” and his criticism that same year of Obama’s promise to go into Pakistan to kill terrorists without that


country’s consent. Romney later clarified that the U.S. should of course search for bin Laden, predicting “he will die.” The desperate Obama team, however, chose to cherry-pick his quotes.


With the economy still in shambles, and Obamacare unpopular, the killing of bin Laden “is the only thing this president can campaign on.” Imagine that: A politician so cynical he’d


politicize national security, said MICHELLE COTTLE in _THEDAILYBEAST.COM_. Of course, that includes “every fricking Republican who has run for office since 2001.” The Republican Party, let’s


not forget, spent most of a decade boasting that President Bush and the GOP had “kept us safe,” even though 9/11 occurred on their watch, and raising the specter of “terrorists at the door”


if a Democrat ever won an election. Obama earned the right to boast, said FRED KAPLAN in _SLATE.COM_. The decision to send SEALs into Pakistan to kill bin Laden was hardly a “no-brainer.”


The CIA had put the odds of Osama even being in the compound between 40 and 60 percent. Obama’s top advisers, including Defense Secretary Robert Gates, were recommending a safer but less


conclusive B-2 bomber or drone attack. The president overruled them, at his own immense political risk. If that kind of calm judgment under pressure isn’t something voters should consider in


November, what is? It certainly doesn’t give Obama the right to lie, said CONOR FRIEDERSDORF in _THEATLANTIC.COM_. When Romney criticized then-candidate Obama’s pledge to violate Pakistani


airspace to take out terrorists, Romney only questioned the wisdom of making the pledge so _publicly._ Besides, if any president deserves credit, it’s George W. Bush, said former CIA


interrogator JOSE RODRIGUEZ in _THE WASHINGTON POST_. It was Bush’s decision to send captured terrorists to CIA “black sites’’ for “enhanced interrogation” that led us to bin Laden—policies


that have since been “denigrated by Obama as unproductive and contrary to American principles.” SUBSCRIBE TO THE WEEK Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis


from multiple perspectives. SUBSCRIBE & SAVE SIGN UP FOR THE WEEK'S FREE NEWSLETTERS From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week


delivered directly to your inbox. From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. That’s a lie by a “war criminal”


trying to justify his direct participation in torture, said ANDREW SULLIVAN in _THEDAILYBEAST.COM_. The U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee reviewed millions of pages of evidence and


concluded that torture did not lead us to bin Laden. Republicans are now freaking out because Bush and Cheney failed to get bin Laden over seven thuggish years, while Obama—a


liberal!—rightly takes credit for dumping his carcass in the sea. Say what you will about Obama, said JON MEACHAM in _TIME.COM_, he’s proved time and again to be “a steely commander in


chief,” with a real killer instinct. He’s turned foreign policy from a Democratic weakness into a Democratic strength, “and the ferocious, sputtering Republican reaction is proof positive


that they know it.” A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com