I noted last week that the neocons, who had largely followed Norman Podhoretz’s and Michael Rubin’s lead in lining up behind Rudy Giuliani, didn’t need too much convincing to gravitate towards John McCain. Given that McCain was a neocon favorite as far back as 2000, the shift was predictable.
And why is the neocon crowd so excited about the Arizona senator? Max Boot, an unpaid foreign policy advisor to the McCain campaign, explains.
Personally, I am less interested in what Rush Limbaugh, Tom DeLay or Ann Coulter think than I am in the views of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Bashar Assad and Kim Jong Il.
This trio — dare we dub them the new “axis of evil”? — has been challenging American interests with growing impudence…. Clearly, these rogue regimes do not fear the consequences of waging a proxy war on America and our allies. They think they can get away with killing and maiming American soldiers — and so far they have been right.
President Bush has not done enough to back up his threats against Iran and Syria, beyond pushing for economic sanctions of limited value…. This is part of a larger trend of Bush combining strong words with weak actions…. This disconnect has done serious damage to American standing and credibility.
It is hard to see how Bush could reverse this decline in America’s “fear factor” during the remaining year of his presidency. That will be the job of the next president. And who would be the most up to the task?
Boot concludes that Americans have to back McCain because he, more so than Bush, would “scare the snot out of our enemies.” He would promote our interests because rivals would be “afraid to mess with him.” And best of all, Boot argues, McCain would be more effective in following through with the international “fear factor” than Bush, because McCain is less reluctant than Bush to force confrontations with our enemies.
It’s like living in a Kafka novel.
Kevin makes quick work of Boot’s painful perspective.
There you have it. If you think the most important aspect of a president is the ability to “scare the snot out of our enemies,” then McCain’s your guy.
Now, you might think that after seven years of trying exactly this, with only the current collapse in our fortunes to show for it, the neocon establishment might at least pause for a moment to wonder if there’s more to foreign policy than scaring the snot out of our enemies. But no. The real problem, apparently, is simply that the Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld administration wasn’t good enough at it. Not bellicose enough. Not unilateral enough. Not warlike enough. What America needs is someone even more bloodthirsty than the crew that got us into this mess. Time to double down, folks.
This, in a nutshell, is what McCain is offering by way of a foreign policy, and not surprisingly, the neocons love it.
I’d just add that Boot is hardly the only one. John Bolton told the CPAC crowd last week that he’s an enthusiastic McCain backer because the senator is “stronger” on Iran, and more conservative than Bush, whom Bolton described as too “moderate.”
McCain, in other words, has convinced a lot of people that he’d govern to Bush’s right when it comes to foreign policy.
Ladies and gentleman, your presumptive Republican Party nominee — the one the media argues is a moderate, and who independents are supposed to love.