Coop's Corner
By

Charles Cooper /

CNET/ August 23, 2009, 1:54 PM

Obama: A One-Term President?

(CBS)
Well, that was fast.

Back in January Democrats were toasting Barack Obama's accession to power as the augury of a once-in-a generation political shift in favor of the Democrats. Just like Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the New Deal era.

So much for any FDR analogies, at least for now. Little more than halfway through Mr. Obama's first year in the White House, we're already reading portrayals comparing him with Lyndon Johnson, who gave up the presidency after a single term because of a failed foreign war.

The analogy isn't precise, though both in Vietnam and Afghanistan, the American public lost confidence in the mission long before their commander-in-chief. Obama underscored his determination to prosecute the war in Afghanistan by defining it last week in as "a war of necessity."

"Those who attacked America on 9/11 are plotting to do so again," he said during an address to the Veterans of Foreign Wars. "If left unchecked, the Taliban insurgency will mean an even larger safe haven from which Al Qaeda would plot to kill more Americans."

Maybe so, but the president is going to have to sell that story to the public at a time of mounting U.S. casualties. What's more, a recent Washington Post-ABC News poll finds that just over 50 percent of respondents said the war in Afghanistan was not worth fighting.

The poll numbers did not escape the attention of the Pentagon. Speaking Sunday during an interview on NBC's "Meet The Press," the Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen said he was concerned by the eroding public support.

For anyone who lived through the 1960s, when LBJ's determination to block the spread of communism in Southeast Asia resulted in more than 500,000 troops being sent Vietnam, there's a familiar echo between past and present. If the U.S. and its NATO allies fail to make progress in Afghanistan, the argument that Afghanistan is a war of choice becomes that much harder. Already, he's getting advice to rethink his assumptions. After Mr. Obama's speech, Richard Haass, the president of the Council on Foreign Relations, wrote a New York Times op-ed flatly contradicting the argument that there are no alternatives to current U.S. policy. Under the title "In Afghanistan, the Choice is Ours," he wrote:

"...there are alternatives to current American policy. One would reduce our troops' ground-combat operations and emphasize drone attacks on terrorists, the training of Afghan police officers and soldiers, development aid and diplomacy to fracture the Taliban."

"A more radical alternative would withdraw all United States military forces from Afghanistan and center on regional and global counterterrorism efforts and homeland security initiatives to protect ourselves from threats that might emanate from Afghanistan. Under this option, our policy toward Afghanistan would resemble the approach toward Somalia and other countries where governments are unable or unwilling to take on terrorists and the United States eschews military intervention."

"Afghanistan is thus a war of choice — Mr. Obama's war of choice. In this way, Afghanistan is analogous to Vietnam, Bosnia, Kosovo and today's Iraq. Wars of choice are not inherently good or bad. It depends on whether military involvement would probably accomplish more than it would cost and whether employing force is more promising than the alternatives."

That's an establishment version of the meme running through criticism of the President from the liberal-left wing of the party. They worry that the U.S. is following a Bush-era policy without seriously examining the assumptions even as circumstances on the ground have changed. Senator Russ Feingold spoke for many progressives when he said earlier this summer that Mr. Obama's decision to send 21,000 more troops - which will bring the U.S. contribution to more than 60,000 soldiers - was mistake.

"I am sad that this has been the deadliest month for our service members in Afghanistan since the war began nearly eight years ago. I continue to be concerned that the troop increase in Afghanistan will lead to more grim milestones like this one and will not have a lasting impact on our ability to deny Al Qaeda a safe haven in that region. Indeed, I am concerned that the so-called surge may actually make matters worse by pushing militants into Pakistan, a nuclear-armed nation which is still not effectively dealing with terrorist sanctuaries in that country."

Of course, if the Afghanistan surge turns into a smashing success, the current narrative about chances for a second Obama term take on a completely different complexion. Assuming, that is, he can get health care reform through.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
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    Charles Cooper is an executive editor at CNET News. He has covered technology and business for more than 25 years, working at CBSNews.com, the Associated Press, Computer & Software News, Computer Shopper, PC Week, and ZDNet. E-mail Charlie.

45 Comments Add a Comment
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tenmozek says:
Great reporting and since when did you start calling your beloved President- Mr. Smith, bring Mr. Bush back in to teach the average American how to really screw an empire over ,thank god I'm Australian and don't have to pay a single cent for my health care other than through my taxes, I really feel for the misguided American.
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railguy69 says:
Our problems began on November 4, 2008 when an uninformed and/or misinformed public were "driven" to vote (many for the first time) for a media backed celebrity candidate. Would any other candidate, with 2 years of spotty, often voting "present", Senate experience, a theme of "change, yes we can" and little else, be able to beat Hillary to the nomination....I doubt it! Now we all have to live with the result. I look forward to November 2, 2010 when he has to share power with a Republican House and Senate after his supporters treat him like a washed up hollywood celeb, and stay home. By the way, our economy and the American way of life is far bigger than Obama and his motly crew! It's fun to see him get angry about news coverage that is critical of many of his silly ideas. You'd think that winning the Presidency, the Senate, and the House would allow him to pass all his agenda items without a problem...unless even his supporters are realizing that his ideas about healthcare, cap and trade, and government spending are based on political payback and make no financial sense.
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nobama2011 says:
yes he is and i hope he is gone by 2011 sending our jobs overseas trying to force a very very very exspensive healthcare plan down our throats he does not care about americas health and well-beaing all he wants is to make hisself rich. you see how he took focus on healthcare off of the news and replaced it with the CIA inerrogation. the healthcare plan will top off the desturction of america we're all going to be poor and sick. swine flu is a joke. i am not getting no vaccination sorry i have never had a flu vaccination i have never had the flu before so why get vaccinated. i thank god that i am not sick oh thank you jesus. but guess what guys god is not going to let that happen. obama has broken too many rules. we need to stand up for "we the people" or else it will cease to exist
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sandy19731 replies:
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I'm not sure which is worse, your spelling, your grammar, or your premise.
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rememberingtim says:
The war in Afganistan is not going very well. Casualties are up. We have had a "surge" in troop levels. But where all of the war protesters? Where is Cindy Sheehan and her liberal allies? Where is Moveon.org? Ooops, I forgot. The protests weren't really about the war, they were about Bush. Now that we have a Democrat in the White House, liberals don't care about the war and never did care about the troops. Very sad, very sad indeed.
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a1106foothil says:
noloyalisti,

Nice try. But the playing of the race card just isn't working any more. By the way, I detested the Bush administration. You see, it isn't a party thing. We are being played like a fiddle by both parties and every time someone blindly follows a party line, they are acting as nothing more than sheep. Let me put it in your language....bahhhh.
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fredcpa says:
too funny. aphganistan is why BHO will be a one-tyermer! ha. oh my god. too funny. like JOHNSON!? theres gonna be more nixon (due to illegalities) and carter (due to tanking the economy) comparasins when this doofus thankfully is gone. come on guys. too funny. BHO doesnt care about aphganistan anyway. why would he? it costs too much. thats why we need to get out of iraq; which we have won. why not get out for monetary reasons of the one we're losing. duh. for a land-=locked pile of rock withno strategic importance. but turning victory in iraq into a loss by preamturely leaving? now thats something BHO can sink his tetth into. a new ally with strategic regional importance. thats one to **** away! if ya beleivbe of course that he doesnt give a damn about the united states being the worlds lone super power anymore. and would rather 'correct' that "problem". as most dems do. coop, was this a spoof?
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noloyalisti says:
The reason he could be a one-term President is because he is not going after these big greedy corporations and standing for the Real Change we need. We are sick of these corporations starting wars using out tax money and soldiers for profit. We are sick of the big health corporations running our health system of rationing and having Death Panels (deciding who lives and dies depending on whether they have money or not).

Most of all I am sick of giving them welfare while we worry about paying out bills.
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a1106foothil says:
"Yes we can"...."Change". Not exactly cerebral election platforms on which to base one's qualifications. But results certainly are. So let us see what we have achieved. Today, Afganistan is heading south and the Taliban enjoy great success, Iraq bombings have escalated, the Lockerbie bomber walks, the deficit projection is an unbelievable $10 trillion, every bill pushed is loaded with pork, special interests are having an Obama heyday, Czars abound, we own an automobile company, my tax dollars just bought my neighbor's car, tax cheats frequent the White House or are in leadership positions, the post office is going broke, medicare is going broke, social security is going broke, healthcare reform is a dismal mess, public opinion polls have reversed, and folks have lost trust in a man who seeks to decieve by driving legislation through before it can be read. And Cash for Clunkers? A real resume filler. So yes; yes we can. And we will during the next election when voters decide who will work in Washington DC and who will not.
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noloyalisti replies:
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You should have written all this a few months ago when the Bush Crime Family was running things. All of these things are the fault of those borrow and spend, war-mongering conservatives and Republi CONS. Just come out and hate the fact that Obama is (half) black.
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onesword says:
For me personally, it's too early to tell. Some of the policies he has made won't take affect until late 2010 into 2011. My determination won't take place until Jan. 2011.
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thetrajectory says:
Mikhail Gorbachev was a victim of his own reform movement. Though praised internationally for his bold vision, Gorbachev?s popularity dipped dramatically in the erstwhile U.S.S.R. The vision and rhetoric of reform is more appealing than actual reform process. Is President Obama treading the Gorbachev path? Or is it still too early to decide? I must confess that the comparison here is not about the impact of reform policies on the political system but more specifically on the political future of the two leaders.
President Obama?s approach and policies in four particular areas can be referred to as ?reformatory? if not revolutionary: narratives on race in the country, foreign relations of the U.S., health care in America and issues of fiscal responsibility.
http://thetrajectory.com/blogs/?p=715
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