The McCain campaign and its Republican allies really seem to believe Barack Obama’s willingness to talk to rival foreign governments is a serious issue that voters will reject. This seemed to begin in earnest, as a campaign matter, when Still-President Bush went after Obama in a speech to Israel’s Knesset, and it’s been a principal GOP talking point ever since.
McCain took the message to AIPAC this morning.
“[W]e hear talk of a meeting with the Iranian leadership offered up as if it were some sudden inspiration, a bold new idea that somehow nobody has ever thought of before,” he said in the advance text of his speech, which was provided by his campaign.
“Yet it’s hard to see what such a summit with President Ahmadinejad would actually gain, except an earful of anti-Semitic rants, and a worldwide audience for a man who denies one Holocaust and talks before frenzied crowds about starting another. Such a spectacle would harm Iranian moderates and dissidents, as the radicals and hardliners strengthen their position and suddenly acquire the appearance of respectability.”
Now, on the substance, McCain’s argument is wildly unpersuasive. As an campaign Obama spokesperson explained, “Here are the results of the policies that John McCain has supported, and would continue. During the Bush Administration, Iran has dramatically expanded its nuclear program, going from zero centrifuges to more than 3000 centrifuges. During the Bush Administration, Iran has expanded its influence throughout a vitally important region, plying Hamas and Hezbollah with money and arms. During the Bush Administration, Hamas took over Gaza. Most importantly, the war in Iraq that John McCain supported and promises to continue indefinitely has done more to dramatically strengthen and embolden Iran than anything in a generation.”
But stepping back from McCain’s misguided embrace of a foreign policy that doesn’t work, the point we’re supposed to take away from McCain’s rhetoric is an anti-diplomacy, anti-appeasement message.
It’s a tough sell, given reality. The crisis with North Korea eased after Bush switched course and engaged Kim Jung Il’s government directly. Israel and Syria are talking. Bush and the Sudanese are talking. McCain, before his metamorphosis into Right-Wing Candidate McCain, even publicly endorsed the notion of engaging Hamas in talks.
Nevertheless, McCain thinks he has a political winner, even if the policy doesn’t make sense. As it turns out, he’s wrong about this, too.
McCain appears to be under the impression that American voters will find his pitch persuasive. What we need, McCain argues, is fewer talks, less negotiating, and less diplomacy. It hasn’t worked before, but maybe if we stick with it, the policy will eventually pay dividends.
Fortunately, just as McCain goes after Obama on this point today, Gallup released a poll showing Americans in large numbers favoring Obama’s approach to McCain’s. (via Oliver Willis)
Large majorities of Democrats and independents, and even half of Republicans, believe the president of the United States should meet with the leaders of countries that are considered enemies of the United States. Overall, 67% of Americans say this kind of diplomacy is a good idea. […]
Although separate Gallup polling shows that few Americans view Iran favorably, and that Iran leads Americans’ list of top U.S. enemies in the world, the new Gallup survey also finds high public support for presidential-level meetings between the United States and Iran, specifically.
About 6 in 10 Americans (59%) think it would be a good idea for the president of the United States to meet with the president of Iran…. [M]ajorities of men, women, younger and older Americans, and those from different regions of the country all [say] direct presidential-level talks with Iran and other enemies are a good idea.
Generally speaking, when asked if our president should meet with “leaders of foreign countries considered enemies of the United States,” diplomacy enjoys the support of 79% of Dems, 70% of independents, and even 48% of Republicans.
In other words, for all the Republican talk about “appeasement,” Americans think Dems are right about this, and the GOP is wrong.
By all means, Sen. McCain, keep criticizing Obama on an issue on which the public agrees with him. The next thing you know, McCain will want to go after Obama for other popular ideas like universal healthcare, scaling back tax cuts for millionaires, and withdrawing from Iraq. Oh wait….