POST
Thomas E. Ricks
•
Monday, May 14, 2012
"If
the election were held today, Obama would win the veteran vote by as much as
seven points over Romney, higher than his margin in the general population," reports
Margot Roosevelt of Reuters.
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The List
Uri Friedman
•
Thursday, May 10, 2012
President Obama still supports the idea of states deciding same-sex marriage on their own,
despite his newly expressed personal views. But if same-sex marriage were to become legal in
the United States, what club of countries would it be joining? Let's take a
tour of the 10 places in the world where same-sex marriage has been legalized
-- all in roughly the last decade.
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POST
Joshua Keating
•
Friday, May 4, 2012
"Spiking
the football"
As expected, President Barack
Obama's campaign is fully capitalizing on the killing of Osama bin Laden in
his reelection pitch. An
ad released on the one-year anniversary of the Abbottabad raid features
former President Bill Clinton
praising Obama for having the courage to order the raid and suggesting that Mitt Romney would not have made the
same call. Romney pushed
back on Monday, saying "Even Jimmy Carter would have given that
order." The ad's release preceded a surprise
trip to Afghanistan, during which the president signed a new strategic
partnership agreement with the Afghan government and addressed
the U.S. public from Bagram air base.
Others criticized the Obama campaign for
politicizing the issue and "spiking the football" as he had promised not to do
in the waking of the killing.. "Shame on Barack Obama for diminishing the
memory of September 11th and the killing of Osama bin Laden by turning it into
a cheap political attack ad," said
Sen. John McCain. The group Veterans for a Strong America released a response
ad, "throwing the penalty flag up on President Obama for excessive
celebration." The ad made the case that "Heroes Don't Politicize Their Acts of
Valor."
Other commentators have
pointed out that Obama is hardly
the first president to politicize military
success.
The battle
over Chen
This week saw a high-stakes standoff in Beijing over the fate of human
rights activist Chen Guangcheng on the eve of a major U.S.-China summit. In addition
to his iconic
status in China, Chen enjoys widespread support in the United States,
including among prominent anti-abortion
members of Congress. After Chen suggested to the media that he had been
pressured to leave the U.S. Embassy and had been abandoned by U.S. officials,
Romney was quick to respond. "If these reports are true, this is a dark day for
freedom. And it's a day of shame for the Obama administration," Romney
said during an event with Virginia where he was endorsed by former
candidate Michele Bachmann.
Romney was
criticized for his response by Weekly
Standard editor and prominent neoconservative commentator Bill Kristol, who
told Fox News, "To inject yourself into the
middle of this way with a fast-moving target I think is foolish."
The United States and China reached
a tentative deal on Friday that will allow Chen to leave China.
Romney
spokesman steps down
The Romney campaign's newly appointed foreign policy and national
security spokesman Richard Grenell stepped
down this week. It wasn't Grenell's foreign-policy views that led to his
downfall as much as the fact that he's openly gay and supports gay marriage.
The appointment of Grenell, who had served as spokesman for former U.N.
Ambassador John Bolton, came under attack from religious
conservatives from the beginning. He also faced
criticism from liberals over tweets attacking major democratic political
figures.
"While I welcomed the challenge to confront President Obama's foreign
policy failures and weak leadership on the world stage, my ability to speak
clearly and forcefully on the issues has been greatly diminished by the
hyper-partisan discussion of personal issues that sometimes comes from a
presidential campaign," Grenell said in a statement.
Newt's exit
Newt
Gingrich officially
suspended his campaign this week, but if the Romney camp was hoping for a strong
endorsement, they came away disappointed. "As for the presidency, I'm asked
sometimes, is Mitt Romney conservative?" Gingrich said in his concession speech
at the Arlington Hilton. "And my answer is simple. Compared to Barack Obama?
You know, this is not a choice between Mitt Romney and Ronald Reagan. This is a
choice between Mitt Romney and the most radical leftist president in American
history."
Though he
acknowledged that his staunch support for establishing a colony on the moon may
not have done wonders for his campaign, he promised to "cheerfully" recommit
himself to the cause. Referring to his grandchildren, he said "I'm not totally
certain I will get to the moon colony," he said. "I am certain Maggie and
Robert will have that opportunity to go and take it. I think it's almost
inevitable on just the sheer scale of technological change."
The latest from FP:
Michael Scheuer makes
the case for why Ron Paul would
be a great foreign-policy president.
Colum Lynch looks at the
guilty schadenfreude
at the U.N. over of Grenell's fate.
With Obama
attacking Romney over his overseas wealth, Uri
Friedman asks whether poor people can open
Swiss bank accounts.
Stephen Walt wonders if the
Kabul trip will be Obama's "mission
accomplished" moment.
Scott Clement says voters are
fine with presidential
chest-thumping, as long as it's their candidate who's doing the thumping.
Michael Cohen argues that the
Bin Laden killing is "the core of [Obama's] reelection prospects."
Read More »
FP Explainer
Uri Friedman
•
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
In launching a new attack ad
that dismisses Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney as a "guy who had
a Swiss bank account," the Obama campaign has once again thrust the debate over
offshore banking into U.S. political discourse. As the Swiss newspaper Tages-Anzeiger noted on Wednesday, the words "Swiss bank account"
still carry a stigma even though there's no evidence that Romney -- who revealed back in January that he had failed to disclose $3 million in a
since-shuttered account with the Swiss bank UBS -- evaded U.S. taxes on the
interest earned by the assets he parked in Switzerland.
Read More »
POST
Stephen M. Walt
•
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Will we eventually look back on President Obama's drop-in visit to
Kabul as his "Mission Accomplished" moment? He's got a tough
re-election battle to fight, the endless war in Central Asia isn't
popular, and he wants to remind everyone that he's The Man Who Got Bin Laden. So he pulled a George W. Bush
and burned up a lot of jet fuel racing to Kabul for a mostly
meaningless photo op and a not-very convincing speech. This sort of
posturing may help him get re-elected -- though I doubt it will have
much effect -- but it's not going to help his long-term legacy when the
U.S. is finally gone and Central Asia is on its own.
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