Saturday, October 24, 2009

SEN. JOHN CORNYN'S LETTER TO OBAMA: STOP PROCRASTINATING AND BLAMING BUSH




On Friday, Oct. 23, U.S. Senator John Cornyn, R-Texas, wrote to President Obama expressing dismay about his "hesitation and procrastination" on General McChrystal's request for additional troops in Afghanistan. Cornyn infers that Obama's indecision is occurring under the guise of an ongoing strategy review. In the letter, Sen. Cornyn said the delay is unnecessarily putting American lives at risk in Afghanistan and the apparent weakness may very well embolden our enemies. Sen. Cornyn is calling on the President to commit to success in Afghanistan and additional troops, as General McChrystal (who Obama hand-picked) has recommended.


Sen. Cornyn also encourages Obama to take ownership of the war and stop blaming Bush, Obama's favorite whipping boy, whenever challenged or questioned. Cornyn's letter follows Dick Cheney's speech, in which he urged the president to stop "dithering" while the troops were in danger.


In July of this year, in an interview with ABC News, President Obama said he was uncomfortable using the word “victory” to describe U. S. goals in Afghanistan. No follow-up question was asked, of course, for him to say what the correct word would be. Way to rally the troops, Barry.


Then in August, the president said about the conflict in Afghanistan:


"This is not a war of choice, This is a war of necessity. This is not only a war worth fighting. This is fundamental to the defense of our people."


Below is the full text of Senator Cornyn's letter to President Obama (bold is mine):


The Honorable Barack Obama

President of the United States

1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW

Washington, DC 20500


Dear President Obama:


I am dismayed by your seeming indecision regarding the way ahead in Afghanistan. I fully appreciate the importance of thorough deliberation on a matter of such importance but, at some point, open-ended deliberation evolves into hesitation and procrastination. Stalled decision-making creates a dilemma for our allies, who are trying to gauge our long-term intentions in the region prior to committing their own forces and other resources.


The assessment by General Stanley McChrystal, commander of the International Security Assistance Force and U.S. Forces Afghanistan, makes plainly clear that a commitment of additional forces to the Afghanistan theater of operations is necessary. He states that, "success will require a discrete 'jump' to gain the initiative . . . ." I understand that he has formally made this request, but that you have yet to decide whether to grant it. I urge you in the strongest terms to move ahead with the "jump" in forces and other resources, as requested by General McChrystal. You handpicked him to carry out this complex task and lead our troops in Afghanistan, and I applaud you for that - he is the right person for the job. The counterinsurgency strategy you announced in March is the right one and, when put to use thus far in Afghanistan, it has proven effective. I ask you to now heed General McChrystal's advice to stick with that strategy and give him what he needs to win. Every moment that goes by without deploying the needed reinforcements to Afghanistan puts those men and women in uniform already on the ground there at greater risk, and that fact requires no additional analysis.


While I recognize the importance of Afghanistan's coming run-off elections and the need to ensure the legitimacy of its government, our national security decisions should never be contingent on such events, which are beyond our control. These elections should not delay your decision on General McChrystal'stroop request.


In the bigger picture, I am concerned that indecision may be seen by our enemies - and not just those in Afghanistan - as a lack of U.S. national resolve. This could potentially put Americans in unnecessary danger. History instructs that, when our enemies perceive a lack of U.S. national resolve, they sometimes act on it.


I worry that your administration considers the Afghanistan mission merely an unwanted distraction from your sweeping domestic "change" agenda. To the contrary, Afghanistan is now the central front in the Global War on Terror, and our national security depends on winning there. It is past time for your administration to dispense with talk of "inheriting" problems - both foreign and domestic - from your predecessor. Instead, I urge you to commit your administration to success in Afghanistan and act decisively to that end. The United States is in the lead in Afghanistan; as our commander-in-chief, I urge you to take ownership of this mission.


Sincerely,


JOHN CORNYN

United States Senator

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