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Rand Paul and foreign policy
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:08 pm
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:08 pm
So, with all this crap going around with Russia, the Benghazi incident, Syria and the like, it got me thinking.
Obama, to the left, was a home-run (initially). Turns out his foreign policy is dildos. He is condemned as a "community organizer" who has no real place at the big boy table and can only campaign and win elections.
Rand for me would be about as close to a home-run domestically as I could get, I think. However, I'm trying to think "WWR(and)D?" in these scenarios and if he even has the experience/gumption to handle it on the big stage.
Bush was a cluster but he did surround himself with people who at least could command a presence on the foreign policy front. They may have been assholes but they were ruthless assholes.
So, how do y'all think Rand would do? I'm concerned we may have a similarly weak foreign policy. I don't know much about his CIC-type personality and the more I think about it, the more I wonder if he's presidential material.
Am I looking too much into it?
Obama, to the left, was a home-run (initially). Turns out his foreign policy is dildos. He is condemned as a "community organizer" who has no real place at the big boy table and can only campaign and win elections.
Rand for me would be about as close to a home-run domestically as I could get, I think. However, I'm trying to think "WWR(and)D?" in these scenarios and if he even has the experience/gumption to handle it on the big stage.
Bush was a cluster but he did surround himself with people who at least could command a presence on the foreign policy front. They may have been assholes but they were ruthless assholes.
So, how do y'all think Rand would do? I'm concerned we may have a similarly weak foreign policy. I don't know much about his CIC-type personality and the more I think about it, the more I wonder if he's presidential material.
Am I looking too much into it?
This post was edited on 3/3/14 at 8:11 pm
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:13 pm to Tiguar
Same thoughts I have. Love him domestically. I think his father is naive on the foreign policy front though. Not sure how much that carries over to the son. I think he would surround himself with smart foreign policy people though.
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:17 pm to Tiguar
quote:
Turns out his foreign policy is dildos.
Don't know why, but I
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:19 pm to rcd0808
quote:
Same thoughts I have. Love him domestically. I think his father is naive on the foreign policy front though. Not sure how much that carries over to the son. I think he would surround himself with smart foreign policy people though.
I think Rand would surround himself with good people on FP. Obama's problem is not positions or what he says it is that he doesn't back it up. I also believe (and yes it is because I like Rand) Rand would have gotten a better deal on nuke reduction that what Obama did. FP is rand's weak point though.
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:21 pm to willthezombie
quote:
I think Rand would surround himself with good people on FP. Obama's problem is not positions or what he says it is that he doesn't back it up. I also believe (and yes it is because I like Rand) Rand would have gotten a better deal on nuke reduction that what Obama did. FP is rand's weak point though.
How is it his "weak point"? He isn't his dad.
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:22 pm to TWD7105
We don't know much about it, I suppose.
You could make that argument for almost every candidate but without something solid to go off of (eg. HRC as SoS) you can only make presumptions. He just doesn't strike me as a commanding kind of guy who can make the tough decisions- and make them correctly.
You could make that argument for almost every candidate but without something solid to go off of (eg. HRC as SoS) you can only make presumptions. He just doesn't strike me as a commanding kind of guy who can make the tough decisions- and make them correctly.
This post was edited on 3/3/14 at 8:23 pm
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:23 pm to Tiguar
quote:
Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, a presidential hopeful and leading non-interventionist voice in the Republican Party, believes the United States should seek "respectful" relations with Russia and avoid antagonizing President Vladimir Putin over the ongoing political turmoil in Ukraine, where a Kremlin-backed government collapsed last week.
"Some on our side are so stuck in the Cold War era that they want to tweak Russia all the time and I don't think that is a good idea," Paul said on Tuesday, in an interview with The Washington Post.
Paul's comments underscore the latest foreign-policy fissure in the GOP, where the party's libertarian wing and Republican hawks have clashed over whether Putin is a threat and the future of U.S.-Russia relations.
quote:
"Watch out for Vladimir Putin because he will try to make mischief because he believes that Ukraine is part of Russia," McCain told CNN on Tuesday. "We ought to tell Putin that interference ... in the ways that he might do it, would be totally unacceptable to the United States."
Paul, however, said those recommendations are misguided, given the culture and history shared by Ukraine and Russia, and the damage such gestures could cause to U.S.-Russian relations.
"The Ukraine has a long history of either being part of the Soviet Union or within that sphere," he said. "I don't think it behooves us to tell the Ukraine what to do. I'm not excited about saying 'hey, let's put the Ukraine in NATO' to rub Russia's nose in it."
Republicans need to remember that Russia remains a geopolitical and military power, Paul added, and that hostile rhetoric has consequences.
"We still need to be conscious of the fact that Russia has intercontinental ballistic missiles," he said. "Though the Cold War is largely over, I think we need to have a respectful - sometimes adversarial - but a respectful relationship with Russia."
"I think we should have trade and relations, criticize them if they have human rights violations," he said. "But for the most part, we should be very glad that we've gotten beyond such a tense situation that we're worried that any minute we could have a nuclear war. We ought to be, I think, proud of where we've gotten with that relationship, and even when we have problems with Russia, realize that we're in a much better place than we were once upon a time."
LINK
Rand thinks we should play nice with Putin
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:23 pm to Tiguar
I think Rand would do good in foreign policy. The biggest problem with many of the folks on this board is that they GREATLY overestimate the ability of the President to control events halfway around the world. More often than not, we come to regret it when we do try to control events, so a non-interventionist foreign policy is the way to go IMO.
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:24 pm to Tiguar
quote:
He just doesn't strike me as a commanding kind of guy who can make the tough decisions- and make them correctly.
I disagree here. He seems very decisive to me.
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:24 pm to Tiguar
The point you bring up is one of the reasons I haven't fully bought into Rand. I don't feel he will be strong on FP, and America doesn't need more weakness in that arena.
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:25 pm to Decatur
He makes some good points. Hopefully he wouldn't play nice after talking shite, though.
When he feels something with conviction yes. It just seems the vast majority of his conviction exists in the domestic arena. Maybe I misunderstand Rand.
quote:
I disagree here. He seems very decisive to me.
When he feels something with conviction yes. It just seems the vast majority of his conviction exists in the domestic arena. Maybe I misunderstand Rand.
This post was edited on 3/3/14 at 8:27 pm
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:27 pm to RockyMtnTigerWDE
Wow they are making up stuff in the Washington Post, those remarks were from before this "crisis" began back in January.
You can tell he is the front runner when they are just making shite up now.
You can tell he is the front runner when they are just making shite up now.
This post was edited on 3/3/14 at 8:27 pm
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:27 pm to trackfan
quote:
he biggest problem with many of the folks on this board is that they GREATLY overestimate the ability of the President to control events halfway around the world.
I think you are grossly off the mark here. I don't think anyone feels a president has "control" over a foreign issue. However, depending on their ability to garner support on the foreign stage, they can have great influence. Our influence has been greatly eroded the last few years.
This post was edited on 3/3/14 at 8:32 pm
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:31 pm to Tiguar
quote:
If you didn’t think Sen. Rand Paul’s (R-Ky.) comments refusing to rule out containment on Iran were sufficient to disqualify him for serious consideration as president, this should do it: “Some on our side are so stuck in the Cold War era that they want to tweak Russia all the time and I don’t think that is a good idea.”
It is not the only time Paul has come running to the defense of a despot. Paul defended Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on the grounds that he is good for Christians.
His comments come at the moment Vladimir Putin is putting his troops on alert on the Ukraine-Russia border and after months of effort to prevent Russian bullying of Ukraine. The “tweaking” of Russia is consistent with 22 years of American foreign policy. Danielle Pletka of the American Enterprise Institute reacted via e-mail: “What a sad day for America when a prominent senator believes that standing for freedom and justice should be labeled ‘tweaking.’” A foreign policy guru at a centrist think tank expressed disgust. “This is pretty irresponsible, under the circumstances. If he were president and made statements like that, implying that Ukraine is somehow rightfully part of Russia, I think it would send a very green light to Putin, who just happens, as Paul speaks, to be holding impromptu emergency military exercises on Ukraine’s border.”
This sentiment is entirely at odds, I would suggest, with virtually all members of the U.S. Senate. Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), head of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, said on Sunday, “The United States should do everything possible to ensure Ukraine remains one country and that their territorial and political integrity is maintained, allowing them the freedom to choose a future within Europe.” Paul’s Putin defense is wildly at odds with the views of another favorite on the right, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.).
In the House, GOP offices were reluctant to speak on the record, acknowledging that Paul is a libertarian on these issues, not a conservative. One House aide commented, “This guy’s got the perfect foreign policy for the Victorian era. We’ve tried hiding behind two big oceans in the past. That doesn’t do you a lick of good in the fiber optic era. We live in a globalized world. International trade powers our economy. You either keep America out in front, or you don’t.” He added, “We’ve seen ‘Isolationism, the Movie‘ before. It ends badly for the U.S.”
And the head of Freedom House, David Kramer, tried to educate the junior senator from Kentucky, explaining in an e-mail, “It’s hard to have a ‘respectful’ relationship with Putin’s Russia when Putin has such utter disdain for the US in particular and for democracy and human rights in general, as well as for his own people. Respect should be a 2-way street, and I can’t imagine Putin changing his nasty, authoritarian stripes any time soon.” He emphasized, “Given Putin’s destabilizing and now threatening role on Ukraine, I don’t see any reason to show him respect.”
President Ronald Reagan, whom Paul says he admires, told the leader of the then-Communist Soviet Union, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!” I suppose Paul wouldn’t have wanted to “tweak” Gorbachev. Even George Kennan , whom Paul likes to cite, was in favor of containing the Russian Bear, not inviting him to gorge on Eastern Europe.
Comments like Paul’s suggest that it is possible to have a worse foreign policy outlook than even the Obama administration. They also belie the notion that Paul is only opposed to American “intervention.” The willingness to cede countries to Russian domination is plain old isolationism in the same vein as Pat Buchanan and the senator’s father, former congressman Ron Paul (R-Tex.). It is for this reason Republicans in the post-Obama era are highly unlikely to invest their confidence in him.
LINK
This post was edited on 3/3/14 at 8:45 pm
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:35 pm to Tiguar
Rand's appeal is he is the only guy that is actually for smaller government, and that includes abroad.
Sometimes not intervening is the right thing.
Maybe Russia spends billions and loses power trying to control an unruly Ukraine. Maybe Ukraine will be their 22nd century Afganistan.
Maybe nobody has sold me yet why this has anything to do with me and the USA.
Sometimes not intervening is the right thing.
Maybe Russia spends billions and loses power trying to control an unruly Ukraine. Maybe Ukraine will be their 22nd century Afganistan.
Maybe nobody has sold me yet why this has anything to do with me and the USA.
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:36 pm to Decatur
quote:
it is possible to have a worse foreign policy outlook than even the Obama administration
Is it possible? sure
Obama has been an utter failure in every facet of foreign policy, only his failure at domestic policy is worse.
This post was edited on 3/3/14 at 8:37 pm
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:40 pm to Decatur
Decatur, your link doesn't work but it sounds like something a neocon would have written. Surely you aren't quoting Jennifer Rubin, are you?
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:41 pm to Stingray
quote:
Rand's appeal is he is the only guy that is actually for smaller government, and that includes abroad.
Sometimes not intervening is the right thing.
Maybe Russia spends billions and loses power trying to control an unruly Ukraine. Maybe Ukraine will be their 22nd century Afganistan.
Maybe nobody has sold me yet why this has anything to do with me and the USA.
Bingo!
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:45 pm to trackfan
Yep, one of the many right wing voices Rand will have to deal with on his way
Posted on 3/3/14 at 8:48 pm to rcd0808
quote:
Same thoughts I have. Love him domestically. I think his father is naive on the foreign policy front though. Not sure how much that carries over to the son. I think he would surround himself with smart foreign policy people though.
I like both Ron and Rand. I think many of Ron's ideas on foreign policy seem extreme and unrealistic because we really on got the see the parts of his proposed philosophy that would have drastically cut spending and foreign aid. I would love to sit down with him and discuss some of the particulars of intelligence and military strategy with both of them. I sincerely doubt (and I could be wrong) that Ron or Rand is prepared to give up SA and influence in world affairs. I prefer to think they might have found a more efficient means to perform the same tasks.
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