Opinion What the world needs now is another George W. Bush

The beauty of being born into Reagan’s America was that for over 20 years, there was consensus on foreign policy and America’s role in the world.

In the post-Soviet world, peace and prosperity reigned supreme, all guided by American strength. These were the good times.

Under Democratic and Republican presidents alike, political battles were waged on the terrain of domestic politics — America’s role in steadfastly defending Pax Americana was rarely in question.

All that was turned upside down in 2008. On the campaign trail Senator Barack Obama had promised to “change Washington.” The slogan didn’t amount to much. After two terms in the Oval Office, Washington appeared to be nearly unchanged.

American foreign policy abroad however, had taken a dangerous and dramatic turn, one that appeased wrong doers, that made the world less safe, and that we are still reeling from today — in fact, it opened the door the the Iranian attack on Israel and Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine.

In 2008, then Senator Barack Obama promised to “engage in aggressive personal diplomacy” after decades of American deterrence. It was a new day!

This new president would surely make friends out of the mullahs in Tehran and the brutal thug in the Kremlin, what with his cool factor, his penchant for basketball diplomacy, and his annual concerts at the White House featuring music’s a-list, how could these brutal dictators not come around?

Putin and the mullahs were unimpressed. They spoke the language of raw power, and unfortunately radical friendship didn’t quite send the right message to deter them from funding terrorism and occupying their neighbours.

This strategic softness signalled to our foes a new American era — one of vulnerability.

Obama’s “aggressive personal diplomacy” extended to the Kremlin too. Looking back on it, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arriving in Moscow with a childish reset button was the beginning of the end.

Our foes, from Iran’s Ayatollahs to Putin’s Kremlin saw opportunity in American retreat, in the absurd confidence that world peace is a product of goodwill rather than strength.

But we can’t put all the blame on the back of Democrats. Sure, Obama’s detente with Iran and Russia was the turning point. And, his failures to deter Putin from occupying 20 per cent of Georgia and his failure to deter Bashar al-Assad from using chemical weapons in Syria in 2013 only deepened the crisis. And of course, the current Biden administration’s eagerness to extract itself from issues of importance in the Middle East has signalled to America’s enemies that they were taking their ball and going home.

But, during this time, a remaking of the Republican Party was underway too. “Compassionate conservatism” was replaced with “America First.” The populism that’s swept the party, with former president Donald Trump at the helm, has been equally dangerous to America’s place in the world, with NATO allies uncertain of America’s trustworthiness should the call come in.

The Reagan doctrine, the peace through strength policy that brought down the Soviet empire, was truly just a memory on both sides of the aisle.

The last American president that truly had the frame in full view was George W. Bush. Say what you will about Operation Iraqi Freedom, but at the end of the day the military objective of that war was successfully completed.

Saddam Hussein was removed from power, his Ba’ath party dismantled, and Iraq freed from his grip. And while the vacuum left behind has proven to be tumultuous, the world is undeniably a better place without Hussein leading Iraq.

In fact, the aftermath of that war wouldn’t have been so tumultuous had President Obama took a firm hand with Iran. If Tehran had feared the consequences of American power, then it likely wouldn’t have pumped money, training, and terror to dozens of proxy groups in Iraq.

Iran wouldn’t have been able to capitalize on the Syrian Civil War either. Lebanon might even still be a deeply flawed but at least stable country instead of the failed state it is today.

As much as nature abhors a vacuum, terror states love the opportunity they present, and will gleefully fill them.

If only we had done things differently.

Then-senator John McCain’s presidential running mate Sarah Palin has not been remembered by history for her prescient foreign policy statements. On the campaign trail in 2008, however, she said “After the Russian Army invaded the nation of Georgia, Senator Obama’s reaction was one of indecision and moral equivalence, the kind of response that would only encourage Russia’s Putin to invade Ukraine next.” In reporting on it at the time, Foreign Policy magazine called the statement “strange.” Strange in 2008 has turned out to be prophetic.

It really makes one wonder what kind of world we’d be living in today if McCain had won the 2008 election, instead of Obama. McCain was a man steeped in the old Washington belief that America must lead on the world stage. He was a foreign policy senator, and would have been a foreign policy president.

We didn’t get McCain and his vision for American foreign policy. We got Obama and his make friends with the bad guys fantasy.

Then we got Trump with his populism. While as president, Trump took a stronger line with Iran, shepherded the Abraham accords and moved the American Israeli embassy to Jerusalem, the Republican party has become more isolationist under his leadership.

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And now Biden, who at times shows flashes of the vision of the never-was president McCain, but nearly always seems to retreat to the “friends at all costs” strategy pioneered by Obama.

The world doesn’t need friends in the White House. It needs champions of liberty and architects of peace through power. Until we re-embrace these truths, we will continue to see the erosion of the order that once promised a safer, more prosperous world.

Like it or not, the free world is kept free from leaders inside the beltway, and usually one man who resides at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. American presidents have increasingly lost sight of that truth, opening the door to a multipolar world, the degradation of Pax Americana, and the danger that comes with it.

What the world needs now is another George W. Bush. Too bad there isn’t one on the ballot.

 
Of course democrats want a Dubya.
It would guarantee 1 party rule.
And their favorite president (who they love so much he has a 3rd term now) was just a black version of Bush anyway. Of course they have decided they love the OG now after hating him. He had the same basic policies they find themselves supporting now.
 
I'm kind of glad this is real. For years and years since I was a kid, I was told Bush was the devil. Now the same people tell me he is a hero who would have saved the world. I am once again reassured I live in Clown World. Thank you, journos, even if you just report the facts on how American foreign policy actually is.

In truth, Bush spent trillions on an agenda that set up nothing but inevitable failure, and sacrificed thousands of American lives and god knows how many foreigners to do so. If only the government cared about Americans to spend that much money. Sure is strange why all the climate obsessives don't go and lynch these neocon retards given federal spending on the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars (or today's insanity in the Ukraine) could have subsidized dozens of the insanely overpriced/overbudget zero emissions nuclear reactors we build now?
Would be slightly different, probably in a bad way.
Bush calling Iraq a crusade and a holy war makes me think he has late stage John Hagee End Time brainrot.
The kind that makes him believe the destruction of America is a good thing because once it's destroyed Jesus will float down from the clouds and save his boomer ass.

He doesn't. Shrub was the ultimate faker since he was a rich Ivy League fratboy larping as a hick. Bush Jr. was nothing but an actor, and his act was to seem all folksy and businessmanlike (like how he owned the Texas Rangers) to make you think he was a normal dude.
 
Someone said this yesterday so I will paraphrase, "It's surreal growing up in the 2000s seeing every libshit rail against the Wars, Fear-mongering, and Bush - only to shut their mouths tight once the nigger puppet was put in, for fear of being called racissssss - then they started bitching again only after Trump showed up. Since then the same libshits have devolved into outright supporting and frothing at the mouth for New Wars, State Lockdowns of the Healthy, and New George Bushs..."

Truly unreal, I actively wish harm upon these people for their generational hypocrisy.
If we're bringing back presidents, I'd love to see what Andrew Jackson could do with a modern US military. Using presidential immunity to kill political opponents in duels would also be a nice touch.
And few Presidents knew more about the Den of Vipers/Synagogue of Satan (Bankerbergs) than Jackson. The Rothschild FED kikes put his image on the 20$ debt note for a reason - because he hated fiat.
 
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Did everyone here forgot we were in Iraq everyone enter since Desert Storm ended? Even if Bush didn't do Operation: Iraq Freedom, we will still be there enforcing the no fly zones over northern and Southern Iraq. At the time Bush had blank check from United States people to finished the job of removing Saddam (and his boys) and leave. It is the failure to leave Iraq never taking his scalps is where and when he permanently fucked up there.
 
He doesn't. Shrub was the ultimate faker since he was a rich Ivy League fratboy larping as a hick. Bush Jr. was nothing but an actor, and his act was to seem all folksy and businessmanlike (like how he owned the Texas Rangers) to make you think he was a normal dude
I am not saying he is a good old southern boy who loves his Bible.

He is the one who opened the door for PNAC and OSP, a bunch of insane Zionist Jews who want to use the blood of US soldiers to subjugate half the Middle East for Israel.

The blame for that lies solely on him, and a good explanation for why he would do that is if he legitimately believed what John Hagee preaches.

I can't look into his heart, so I will take his association with John Hagee at face value.

But what is the alternative? That he knew these wars would financially damage the US, damage the US's reputation, cost a massive amount of American lives, and have absolutely zero benefit for the US, only helping Israel achieve its goal of dominating the Middle East?
And did he do it because he hates the US or is he being blackmailed by Israel?

Leftoids usually bring up conspiracies about oil being his motivation, but that is provable bullshit. The US got less oil during and after the war from Iraq than before. Funny enough, Israel increased its oil imports from Iraq immensely. If I remember correctly, from 0 to something like 70% of their overall oil imports came from the Kurdish-controlled region of Iraq after the war.

So he is either what he says he is: an End Time lunatic who wants the West to be destroyed, Israel to become the satanic capital of the world for Jesus to come down and rescue him. Or he went to Little Saint James, raped and murdered a bunch of little boys on film, and now does whatever Israel tells him to do, which leads to the exact same outcome.
 
It was his turn!

Jeb!.jpg
 
The last American president that truly had the frame in full view was George W. Bush. Say what you will about Operation Iraqi Freedom, but at the end of the day the military objective of that war was successfully completed.
So we found and disposed of Saddam's weapons of mass destruction?
Saddam Hussein was removed from power, his Ba’ath party dismantled, and Iraq freed from his grip. And while the vacuum left behind has proven to be tumultuous, the world is undeniably a better place without Hussein leading Iraq.
Is it though?
In fact, the aftermath of that war wouldn’t have been so tumultuous had President Obama took a firm hand with Iran. If Tehran had feared the consequences of American power, then it likely wouldn’t have pumped money, training, and terror to dozens of proxy groups in Iraq.
Iran saw how we handled Iraq, which is why they didn't fear us.
 
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