6 September 2013 -
What
Could Possibly Be More Important Than Syria?
The
importance of the crisis in Syria is overblown.
But, the President is deflecting our focus on to strategically
irrelevant events in an effort to avoid facing real threats to the United
States which are within our power to solve.
Consider the following strategic threats to America.
The
federal debt is almost $17,000,000,000,000, more money than the entire country
produces in a year. And, the federal
government spends nearly a trillion dollars more than it receives in
taxes. Unless the President follows the
Constitutional mandate to submit a legitimate annual budget and drastically reduce
spending on programs that are not the federal government’s constitutional
obligation, foreign countries eventually will no longer accept U.S. dollars or
bonds in payment. Our money—our
sovereignty—will then be worthless. Foreign
banks and foreign interests will dictate how we pursue our own strategic
interests. If this isn’t a looming sovereignty
crisis, nothing is.
Over
six percent of our population resides in the U.S. illegally. Our sovereignty—our ability to control our
borders and to enforce our laws—is eroding.
Foreign interests, whose concepts of government are fundamentally
different from those outlined in our Constitution, increasingly influence
local, state, and federal governance.
What is a bigger threat to the United States, a civil war in Syria where
victory by either side does little to change our strategic position in the
region, or an administration that selectively enforces immigration laws,
refuses to let states enforce immigration laws, and encourages local
politicians to ignore the law with “sanctuary city” policies? If our illegal immigration situation isn’t an
invasion that sparks domestic conflict, nothing is.
The
U.S.’s self-serving administrative and regulatory government rivals any in
Europe. Currently, it uses tax
enforcement powers to squelch conservative dissent. To support an ill-conceived anti-terrorism
strategy, it willfully intrudes on Americans’ legal, private
communications. By regulatory fiat, it
picks winners and losers in the marketplace.
We can hardly claim moral authority as the world’s guardian of democracy
and freedom when we govern ourselves more like Napoleon’s descendants than like
Washington’s.
In
foreign policy decision-making, particularly in the Middle East, the President
has been naïve and feckless, and has behaved dangerously. His successes are short-lived and leave us open-ended
exposure to more violence. In March through
November of 2011, for example, using UN Resolution 1973 as cover, the President
acted without congressional approval and pushed NATO to conduct a bombing
campaign over Libya. Fortunately, this
resulted in virtually no friendly casualties, little collateral damage on the
ground, and the eventual execution of a really bad guy, Mohammar Qadafi. But, there have been longer-term consequences
of our actions, such as the rise of radical Islamist violence in the government
and on the streets of Libya. When these
radical Islamists killed our ambassador and three others in Benghazi in 2012, our
response went from embarrassing to criminal.
One bad foreign policy decision by our President led to another, and
America and Libya now are no better off than they were in February 2011. The next embarrassments will come if the
President uses the same decision-making process in Syria that he used in Libya.
Finally,
the government of the United States must seize strategic initiative in the
Middle East and reject pressure to react to events like the Syrian civil
war. We can become literally energy
independent instead of allowing economic and diplomatic power to flow to countries
like Saudi Arabia and its neighbors. The
administration should encourage the development of ALL of America’s oil,
natural gas, coal, and nuclear power sources.
We should become an energy exporter.
It is within our domestic power to do so. That would dry up funds to the terrorist
networks that hate America and to the organizations that threaten our friend,
Israel, the only working democracy in the Middle East. Our energy independence can reprioritize all
crises in the Middle East and within the international economic arena.
All
strategic threats to the United States are within our domestic power to
resolve. But, the strength to use that
power will never emanate from the President or Congress unless we, the people,
demand they use it. We must demand that those
who govern make these strategic changes;
then and only then will we retain the status of super-power, command the
world’s respect, recover our sovereignty, and reclaim the ability to define our
own destiny.
No comments:
Post a Comment