In an interview with the AP yesterday, GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney took a rather passive attitude towards the terrorist responsible for 9/11.
[Romney] said the country would be safer by only “a small percentage” and would see “a very insignificant increase in safety” if al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden was caught because another terrorist would rise to power. “It’s not worth moving heaven and earth spending billions of dollars just trying to catch one person,” Romney said.
Now, I think I know what Romney means by this, but it certainly sounds as if he’s saying capturing the architect of the 9/11 attacks is too expensive. We looked for him, we let him go at Tora Bora, and now bringing him to justice has proven to be a big hassle. Better to just move on.
To borrow a page from the Republicans’ rhetorical playbook, isn’t this a “defeatist” attitude? For a party that’s supposed to be “tough” on terror, isn’t this kind of complacency about a mass-murdering head of a massive terrorist network conveying the wrong kind of message to our enemies?
Eric Kleefeld noted that a Democratic candidate saying the exact same thing would probably generate national outrage.I suspect that’s right, which is why it’s even more interesting that Romney’s remarks seem to have gone almost completely unnoticed.
Kleefeld explained today:
A news search shows there hasn’t been any coverage of it beyond the original AP write-up yesterday, where the comment itself was buried towards the bottom of the piece.
There’s been almost no mention of it whatsoever in any of the places where one would expect such a thing to provoke outrage — that is, in the conservative media and blogosphere. There are no mentions of it on Power Line Blog, Town Hall, InsaPundit, Human Events, or notably the site of Hugh Hewitt, who has written a pro-Romney book.
Indeed, the only condemnation we can find of Romney’s remark comes in a single post on the National Review’s group blog, The Corner. Byron York writes: “Perhaps Romney should watch the tape of the planes hitting the towers again.”
York’s reaction is the one, I suspect, most Americans would have. Osama bin Laden slaughters 3,000 Americans, and Romney takes a blasé attitude about his capture? I find it hard to believe the public is onboard with this.
Then again, maybe people are less concerned than I realize. Six months after the 9/11 attacks, the president who once vowed to get Osama bin Laden “dead or alive” suddenly found the terrorist passé. Far from a commitment to bringing bin Laden to justice, Bush announced, “I truly am not that concerned about him.”
Neither, apparently, is Romney. At what point did the GOP decide that bin Laden no longer matters?