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Cal Thomas: Need to redefine America’s role in the world

  • Tribune Media Services
  • Published Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012, at 6:14 p.m.
  • Updated Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012, at 6:14 p.m.

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney delivered a foreign policy speech last week to cadets at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Va. He was correct in his indictment of the Obama administration for its numerous failures – especially in the Middle East – and his embrace of Ronald Reagan’s “peace through strength” philosophy. A strong and respected America is less likely to be attacked.

The Obama administration’s approach to foreign policy has been one of apology, genuflection to dictators and inconsistency.

“It is the responsibility of our president to use America’s great power to shape history,” Romney told the VMI cadets. “Not to lead from behind, leaving our destiny at the mercy of events. Unfortunately, that’s exactly where we find ourselves in the Middle East under President Obama.”

Romney’s speech was serious, especially a line after his call for a “change in course” in the Middle East.

“That course should be organized around these bedrock principles: America must have confidence in our cause, clarity in our purpose and resolve in our might,” he said.

I’m fine with that. But what is our cause, what is our purpose, and where has might, alone, caused that purpose to be successful?

Iraq? Afghanistan? Vietnam?

Will it work with Iran?

Does Romney think bombing Iran, with or without Israel’s assistance, will deter the mullahs from their goal of acquiring nuclear weapons? Maybe it would, but can he be sure?

Would Israel, and possibly America, be able to tolerate a counterstrike and possible terrorist acts on U.S. soil by Iranian and Hezbollah agents who very well could be in the U.S. awaiting instructions?

John F. Kennedy said in his 1961 inaugural address that we were willing to “pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and success of liberty.”

Eleven years later, as America was being torn apart by the Vietnam War, Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern said the United States “can’t be the policeman of the world.”

Who is right? I think both are right. America’s role in the world must be redefined and explained to its citizens.

We can’t afford to go everywhere and do everything. It isn’t fair to our young men and women who are asked to die, or lose limbs, and it isn’t fair to taxpayers who must pay for these wars.

Still, America has an interest in promoting liberty and freeing people from tyranny. That interest is moral as well as self-serving. Democracies don’t attack each other. But when and how should we act?

The flaw in Romney’s otherwise good speech was his restatement of the policy of the current administration and previous ones that a Palestinian state adjacent to Israel is the key to Middle East peace.

There is no evidence the Palestinian-Arab-Muslim world shares this goal.

Radical Islamists teach, preach and act as if their objective is the elimination of Israel. The Palestinian leadership has not lived up to a single promise or agreement, while Israel has sacrificed land and lives in the pursuit of a Western mirage.

Romney’s VMI speech sounded good to some American ears, but what does it mean to the rest of the world, which faces not invading armies but invading terrorists without uniforms or a nation-state?

Cal Thomas, a columnist with Tribune Media Services, appears in Opinion on Wednesdays.

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