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Opposition to Chuck Hagel is a No-Win Scenario for the GOP
By: Hrafnkell HaraldssonJan. 7th, 2013more from Hrafnkell Haraldsson
Republican opposition to the idea of having Senator Chuck Hagel, a Republican himself, serve as Secretary of Defense, is a problem for Republicans; a problem made by Republicans, for Republicans.
We listen daily to the Republicans claim that Obama has imposed himself on government, shut out conservative voices and so forth. But Obama had previously selected Robert Gates, another Republican, as the 22nd Secretary of Defense, from 2006 to 2011. And now, with the departure of David Petraeus, the president wants Hagel.
So what’s to be upset about? You’d think they’d be leaping out of their seats to dance with joy.
They say Obama doesn’t reach across the aisle, but here he reaches across the aisle and they slap his hand away. Angry white man Lindsey Graham (R-SC), obnoxious as ever, appeared on CNN’s State of the Union and said the nomination of Hagel was an “in-your-face nomination.”
Watch the video from Mediaite:
Really?
How does that work, exactly? One would expect that sort of comment if Hagel was, say, Muslim. But he is a Republican as well as a Christian – Episcopalian, to be precise. Hell, he’s even white.
David Boaz, at the Cato Institute, answered the question in 2010, “Is Chuck Hagel a Republican?” in reply to a charge by Weekly Standard senior writer Stephen Hayes, who “dismissed former senator Chuck Hagel as ”an anti-Republican Republican.”
Boaz points out that Hagel,
As Boaz says, this sounds Republican. On top of it all, Boaz reveals that “Hagel had a lifetime rating of 84 percent from the American Conservative Union and consistent A and B grades from the National Taxpayers Union.”
Yeah…I don’t see that whole “in your face” thing. Boaz concluded that “if a leading conservative TV commentator can call Chuck Hagel an “anti-Republican Republican” when his actual record is more traditionally Republican than the policies of the Bush-Cheney administration, then there’s an odd sort of blacklisting going on.”
I’m with Boaz on this one.
I suppose there could be the little thing about Hagel being *gasp* anti-war. He served in Vietnam. Was wounded, earning two purple hearts, and at one point, had his life saved by his brother (after previously having saved his brother’s life).
God’s Own Party, after all, has embraced the Biblical concept of Just, or Holy War. This makes Hagel a heretic, a defiler of sorts.[1] Just War is a cry taken up by Augustine, of whom scholar Peter Brown says,
It was a prophetic truth that the church should be diffused among all nations…it was a prophetic truth on exactly the same level that the kings of the Earth should serve Christ in fear and trembling; that the gods of the Nations should be uprooted from the face of the Earth, and that what had been sung, centuries before by King David, should now become manifest, as a public command, in the repression of pagans, Jews and heretics throughout the Roman Empire.[2]
If this doesn’t sound like today’s Republican Party, as embodied by the policies of George W. Bush and later taken up by Rick Santorum and others, I don’t know what does.
Hagel sounds like a virtuous man, to me, so what other problems are there?
They say Hagel is anti-Semitic, because of a comment he made in 2007 when he told an interviewer that the “Jewish lobby intimidated lawmakers.”
How is this anti-Semitic? There is a Jewish lobby. They do lobby on behalf of Israel. This has nothing to do with religion or even ethnicity. Nor is it even untrue. Lindsey Graham says Hagel would be the ”most antagonistic secretary of Defense toward the state of Israel in our nation’s history.”
If, by antagonistic, Graham means Hagel oppose Israel directing American foreign policy, I’m all for antagonistic. Bring Hagel on. Graham and his friends would just as soon have an Israeli serve as Secretary of Defense.
And what about Ann Coulter, who says she wants Jews to be “perfected,” in other words, made into Christians. Isn’t this anti-Semitic? Or is it okay for ravening Republican extremists to be openly anti-Semitic in religious terms, but expressing disagreement or reservations about Israel as a state, is forbidden?
And then there is the little matter of Hagel wanting to actually TALK to Iran before blowing it into the Stone Age. In this he dares *gasp again* agree with President Obama. Not only that, but Hagel dared oppose the labeling of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist organization (how could anything Iranian not be terrorist in orientation?) and before that, he opposed Bush’s surge in Iraq (just as he opposed Obama’s surge in Afghanistan).
I begin to see why Obama might want Hagel. He isn’t all one thing or another, just like Obama isn’t all one thing or another. But Lindsey Graham said, speaking for many Republicans no doubt, that “quite frankly, Chuck Hagel is out of the mainstream of thinking, I believe, on most issues regarding foreign policy.”
If anyone is out of the mainstream, it is Lindsey Graham, the angry white man who says there aren’t enough angry white men to sustain his angry white man policy positions.
All this is bad enough, but perhaps Hagel’s worst crime is wanting to trim the bloated defense budget. The man who dared say “there’s no glory [in war], only suffering,” also said “The Defense Department, I think in many ways, has been bloated.” Speaking in a September 2011 Financial Times interview, he went on to utter those words no righteous Republican dare utter: “So I think the Pentagon needs to be pared down.”
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), appeared on ABC’s This Week to say that Hagel would get a “thorough vetting” and “subjected to the same kinds of review of his credentials as anyone else” nominated by the president, which doesn’t sound at all encouraging, given the past fate of presidential nominees under the Obama administration. Look how well Elizabeth Warren and Susan Rice fared.
Of course, they had the disadvantage of lacking penis and testicles. Hagel at least has that going for him, though no doubt Sarah Palin, who has, unlike Hagel, never been shot at, might disagree. You notice the biggest Republican warmongers are those who have never been in the line of fire.
McConnell said, in a barely veiled threat at Hagel’s Israel comments, opposition to the Surge in Iraq and support for negotiation with Iran,
“Whoever is nominated for secretary of defense is going to have to have a full understanding of our close relationship with our Israeli allies, the Iranian threat, and the importance of having a robust military.”
McConnell did not say he would support Hagel, with whom he served in the Senate.
“He’s certainly been outspoken in foreign policy and defense over the years. The question we’ll be answering, if he’s the nominee, is: Do his views make sense for that particular job? I think he ought to be given a fair hearing, like any other nominee. And he will be.”
Obama will be in for the fight of his life making Hagel the Secretary of Defense, a fight he was not willing to undertake on Susan Rice’s behalf, or on Elizabeth Warren’s. Warren turned around and bit the Republicans in the ass by ousting Scott Brown in Massachusetts and replacing him with a sweet, common-sense voice of reason. Will the GOP really go whole hog in its opposition to President Obama reaching across the aisle to pluck from their ranks a member of his cabinet?
There is no possible scenario in which this does not make the Republicans look bad and President Obama look good. Interpreting Obama’s resounding victory in November as a mandate to choose Obama’s cabinet for him is a non-starter.
Yes, gays and others can find fault with Hagel on his opposition to a man because of his sexual preferences (a comment made in 1998). Hagel did apologize for that, though opponents will argue waiting 12 years to do so is too long and marks the apology as insincere.
But David Mixner writes on his blog today,
Yes Hagel was wrong on DADT and DOMA but so was President Clinton and Ms. Clinton. His choice of language with Hormel was horrible. It is over a decade later. As Secretary of Defense his job will be to carry out the President’s policies.
The purpose of a movement is to allow people to change their minds, apologize and join our ranks. It is not to stop them from office forever, punish them and not forgive. The fact of the matter is that we have embraced and forgiven people who did far worst things to the LGBT community then Hagel.
This is a fight Obama ought to make. Whether he was wrong before to back off from opposition to Warren and Rice, he must stand up to Republican efforts to make his cabinet more congenial to them. They lost the election, after all. Hagel has the qualifications – all the qualifications – you could ask for. He’s an independent-minded Republican, just as Obama is an independent-minded Democrat. If Obama can live with a man who will tell him he is wrong to his face, all the better. That’s the kind of governance we need.
[1] Reuven Firestone “Who Broke Their Vow First? The ‘Three Vows’ and Contemporary Thinking about Jewish Holy War” in The Just War and Jihad, ed. R. Joseph Hoffman (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2006), 77). “Although the Bible does not use the term ‘holy’ to define its wars, the very fact that most of Israel’s biblical wars were authorized or associated with the God of Israel makes them comparable to ‘holy war’ – or divinely authorized warring in other religious systems and contexts.”
[2] Peter Brown, “St. Augustine’s Attitude to Religious Coercion,” JRS 54 (1964), 110.
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Diane
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 10:05 am
But but….
He’s not a tea party republican.
That’s the only kind that counts
Arky Lake
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 10:11 am
Excellent analysis! It appears that the republicans are continuing their policy of NO in spite of a thrashing at the polls. Gerrymandering is the only reason they retain the house. They are on the Titanic and it’s sinking fast! (I think you mean with the exit of Leon Panetta, not Patraeus.)
Debra Vermaas
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 10:33 am
Although Hagel voted for the Iraq war, in the days leading up to that vote he posed some very valid questions about it. That infuriated the war profiteering neo-cons that were drooling over the prospect of lining their pockets.
These same scumbags want to take us into a needless war with Iran, and will kick and scream like little children to get their way.
All this makes me like Hagel even more. Good pick Mr. President.
djchefron
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 10:56 am
Even though Hagel is a republican and I disagreed with some of his stances at least he was sane and not blinded by ideology.
Now this is my problem.Why for the love of the flying spaghetti monster when Democrats wins the presidency it seems we always have to have a republican for sec. of defence?Is it written that only republicans can be trusted on national security?If so I want a refund because they have proven the peter principle ten fold.
That being said I cant wait for the clownshow led by John”cant fly straight”McCain and Lindsey”closet what closet”Graham try to stab their “good friend”in the back.
BTW I like my popcorn with extra buttterrrr.
Reynardine
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 11:02 am
If you get the raw, unseasoned Walmart popcorn and plant it, you can not only grow your own, but when the ears are about 4″ long, it’s transcendentally delicious as raw baby corn.
djchefron
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 11:07 am
I never thought about that.The way things are going I might need a ready supply on hand.
knight4444
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 2:27 pm
I imagine some liberals here might not care for my opinions about democrats! lol anyway republicans have demonized liberals and democrats to the point that just saying ”liberal” makes under educated americans see red!! and unfortunately many dems have fallen for the slander and run hiding from the term liberal Never underestimate the power of mass media and the refusal of the american public to educate themselves on anything of importance. The republicans party is a dead man walking and our beloved democratic party absolutely REFUSES to put them out of their misery!! why are we negotiating with neanderthals!!! WHY?!
Shiva (Moderator)
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 2:35 pm
You are free to give your opinion as long as you do it like you have been. Doesnt matter who likes or dislikes
Larry
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 6:23 pm
Do we? Panetta is a Dem, previous one was an R but PBO held him over from Bush. It is good to have a Republican figurehead when you want to cut the bloat. Maybe Hagel can return the excess money Congress voted the Dept of Defense after the DOD said they didn’t need that much and terminate some projects and purchases the Pentagon doesn’t want.
Ryan Keith
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 11:05 am
The entire campaign against Hagel is battle between neoconservatives and realists over which doctrine will hold sway for American foreign policy in the 21st century. Neocons are scared they will lose sway over the military and be consigned to the margins as they rightfully were before Reagan’s second term: whowhatwhy.com/2013/01/07...
Reynardine
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 11:07 am
Although they approved John Kerry because they think it might give them another Senate seat, I really think the Republicans intend to obstruct every other Cabinet appointment the President tries to make.
knight4444
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 11:21 am
Now this is where I give Obama high marks! nominating Hagel has once again gotten our band of stooges fighting and going back into cannibal mode!! What truly boggles my mind is how can ANY self respecting republican wittiness this current gop party and not be completely disgusted! to be honest FUX news by providing so much utter nonsense in the long run are destroying ANY credibility the gop had! how republicans actually consider FUX as ”news” simply demonstrates that when a person wants to believe something so desperately that facts, common sense, common decency just don’t matter!
Rebecca
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 11:37 am
RepubliCONS are never going to be satisfied with anything or anyone President Obama chooses. GOP/TEA has poisoned the entire party and they were already known for being backwards in all train of thought, and downright offensive on most everything.
PBO should nominate who he wants in his cabinet and let the Senate make asses of themselves. They are really good at it.
robyn ryan
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 11:44 am
Please proceed, Senator…
Edward Dylan Goff
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 11:51 am
So, when Ministers are confirmed in the Knesset do they probe the nominee about his loyalty to their ally, the US?
I think people like Graham need to be reminded that this post is Secretary of Defense for the US and not Ministry of Defense for Israel.
Ultimately, Hagel needs to be loyal to only his own country, to his commander-in-chief and to the constitution.. and that’s something that most of the Tea Party radical politicians in Congress would have a hard time proving.
djchefron
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 12:36 pm
This right here.
Your loyalty is to the United States not Israel.For all of Pat Buchanan’s faults he does understand this.It is time that Aipac the ADL and every other tom,dick and harry if you want to protect and defend Israel you need to renounce your citizenship and pack your bags.
For those who say that’s anti- semantic,tough doo-doo you can go too
djchefron
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 1:40 pm
Hammer meets Nail
The Real Reason Republicans Hate Hagel
It has more to do with President Obama than the former senator from Nebraska.
www.slate.com/articles/ne...
BlueTrooth
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 4:32 pm
While I agree with most of your thoughts on the Hagel nomination, I do disagree that this will be the President’s “fight of his life”. I also disagree with the notion that the President deliberately avoided a “fight” for Susan Rice. I’m quite confident that Susan Rice was the first to raise the issue of withdrawing her name from consideration before a formal nomination was announced. Regarding the vocal objections to Hagel, all I’m seeing is a few Republicans attempting to energize their dwindling base of irrational Tea Party zealots. There is no basis for NOT confirming the appointment with regard to Hagel’s resume or personal history. I’m anticipating some excitable rhetoric, but in the end I don’t see much of a “fight” and most of the fireworks will be isolated to Fox News. I could be way wrong, but Colin Powell’s endorsement takes away a lot of the “out of the mainstream” talking point.
Bill
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 4:44 pm
I agree. Except for the Log Cabin Republicans the gay community seems to be coming around. Democrats will have a difficult time voting against him. And Republicans will look very foolish opposing him in a week or so.
Elizabeth 44
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 5:43 pm
I agree with you on Susan Rice. She has small children, and its my guess that on second thought she realized SOS was not a good idea at this time.
Larry
Jan. 7th, 2013 at 6:09 pm
Confused. I hadn’t realized the Secretary of Defense set foreign policy. I thought he carried out the policy of the President as set by statute in his job description as found in USC Title 10, Subtitle A, Part I, Chapter 2, § 113 “The Secretary is the principal assistant to the President in all matters relating to the Department of Defense. Subject to the direction of the President and to this code and section 2 of the National Security Act of 1947″
It shouldn’t matter what his personal opinions are, he does what he is told or resigns. Not so?
j
Jan. 8th, 2013 at 8:59 am
Graham and McCain leading the attack – really!!!!!
Graham – a log cabin republican who is afraid to come out submits to McCain’s wishes all the time, and McCain who would have Palin as VP, come on!
Who would listen to these two?
djchefron
Jan. 8th, 2013 at 9:28 am
Cant get that image out of my head.Lindsey summitting to McCains wishes.Damn you!!!!!
Shiva (Moderator)
Jan. 8th, 2013 at 9:53 am
I keep getting these images of John McCain standing over Lindsey Graham with a whip