Obama
Impresses "Educated Class" But Not Terrorists
by
Michael Barone
TownHall.com
Just whom are we trying to impress?
That's a question that occurred to me when, on his second full day in the
presidency, Barack Obama announced we would close the Guantanamo detainee
facility within one year.
It's a question that has kept occurring to me over the last year and nine
days, even though Obama and his administration have proven unable to keep that
promise.
Whom are we trying to impress by ruling out enhanced interrogation techniques
on unlawful combatants, techniques that produced valuable intelligence that
saved American lives? Whom are we trying to impress by limiting questioning to
the Army Field Manual?
That's a good guide for handling prisoners of war and other lawful combatants
covered by international law. But whom are we trying to impress by extending
those protections to those who are not covered by the Geneva Conventions or
other treaties we have signed?
Whom are we trying to impress by trying Khalid Sheik Mohammed in civilian
courts after he already pled guilty to a military tribunal? And trying him in
New York City, where the trial will cost something like $1 billion and tie up
Lower Manhattan for years?
Would these people we are trying to impress be that much less impressed if
the administration belatedly follows the advice of Mayor Michael Bloomberg and
Democratic Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Kirsten Gillibrand and stages that trial
on a military base or elsewhere outside of New York City?
And whom are we trying to impress by treating the failed Christmas bomber
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab not as a military combatant but as a common civilian
criminal, even though he launched an attack on the United States from outside
the country? Whom are we trying to impress by administering Miranda warnings and
telling him that he has a right to a lawyer and the right to remain silent?
If the answer to these questions is that we are trying to impress Islamist
terrorists, we have clearly failed.
It is a matter of simple fact that the announcement that we would close
Guantanamo and other policy changes did not prevent Abdulhakim Muhammad from
killing U.S. soldiers at the Little Rock recruiting station last June. It did
not prevent Nidal Hasan from killing U.S. soldiers at Fort Hood in November. It
did not prevent Abdulmutallab from attempting to blow up Northwest flight 253
over U.S. or Canadian airspace on Christmas Day.
Public opinion polls in the Arab and Muslim world have shown only slight
upticks in opinion about America in the months after Barack Obama's speeches in
Cairo and Turkey and after these administration policy changes. Terrorists did
not say, "Gosh, now that Obama is closing Guantanamo and terrorists are being
given Miranda rights, I've got to change my mind and decide that the United
States is a really nifty country and that freedom and democracy are good things
after all."
But perhaps our goal was to convince not terrorists but "world opinion." Are
the government and the billion people of India going to think better of the
United States if we treat terrorists more gently? Not likely -- they're the
targets of terrorists themselves.
How about the government and the billion people of China? My guess is that
they see this as weakness, which they would never indulge.
The governments and peoples of Europe? Well, certainly some governments would
be pleased, as would the readers of left-wing newspapers and those who attend
international conferences. But polling shows that Europeans tend to take a
tougher stand on these matters than the elites who dominate the international
dialogue.
So whom are we trying to impress? The answer seems to be left-wing
intellectuals, academics, voters -- "the educated class," in David Brooks' term
-- who decried George W. Bush's policies as reeking of fascism and dictatorship.
We are making policies to please those who hang out in law school faculty
lounges.
Their numbers turn out to be less formidable than the amount of coverage they
have received in sympathetic media suggests. For that we have evidence from the
commonwealth of Massachusetts, where Republican Senate candidate Scott Brown
called for handing over KSM and the Christmas bomber to military tribunals. His
Democratic opponent disagreed. She carried "the educated class," blacks and
Hispanics. Brown carried just about everyone else and, even in Massachusetts,
won.
Which leads me to ask, again: Just whom are we trying to impress?
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