In reading these columns by the esteemed people at National Review Online, we are struck by the common thread that this president and his counselors are, to a person, unqualified to run our nation's affairs.
While this material is a condemnation of the Obama administration's amateurism, it highlights the silliness of the American electorate. That and of the cultural rot that led to our selecting this petulant juvenile celebrity as our trophy president. TD
John Podhoretz; Feckless Obama embarrasses the nation
“ 'Thanks to Pres. Obama’s strength,” tweeted House Democratic honcho Nancy Pelosi, “we have a Russian proposal.” The Washington Post’s Ezra Klein tweeted, “Kind of amazed I’m saying this, but the White House may really be about to win on Syria.”
"Ah, yes, winning. Which is to say, being humiliated, acting weak, behaving in vacillatory fashion, making a mockery of your office, destroying your country’s credibility, making your own words look desperately foolish, and ceding foreign policy to the Machiavellian machinations of a gangster regime in Moscow."
NRO Editors; Amateur Hour
...."This deal is the immediate, concrete expression of that loss, with Putin
elevated, Assad more secure, and Obama humiliated."
...."American power is a fearsome thing. But the American presidency at the moment,
occupied by a rank amateur, is not."
Victor Davis Hanson; Obama’s Farce
"No one currently in charge of U.S. foreign policy has any record of
foreign-policy success. Those who might have offered wise counsel either are
dead, have left the administration, or do not exercise authority — Crocker,
Eikenberry, Gates, Holbrooke, Mattis, Petraeus."
Daniel Pipes; Forget Syria, Target Iran
"In this light, I recommend that Congress reject the sideshow proffered by the
administration and instead pass a resolution endorsing and encouraging force
against the Iranian nuclear infrastructure."
Rich Lowry; Unbelievably Small and Incredibly Unpersuasive
"If he’s not already, the president may soon wonder why, with the Syria vote, he built a pyre, threw his presidency on it, and asked Congress to decide whether to light a match. Considering the gravity of the possible defeat before him, any escape hatch can look attractive, even one provided by his secretary of state’s careless words."