I thought this was a very interesting article from Floyd and Mary Beth Brown at Townhall.com:
There's my two cents.
On the night of January 20, 2009, a new commander-in-chief will leave the inaugural podium, parade, and festivities for the Oval Office. A national security staff ready with the latest "threat briefing" will join him there. On his desk, they will place a thick binder of reports, each focusing on real or emerging threats to our national security. In the quiet of the Oval Office -- in the presence of these stern-faced, deadly serious briefers and advisers -- Barack H. Obama, should he be the next president, will come face-to-face with reality.Wow. This is certainly not something you'll see reported in the MSM! This is one of the biggest weaknesses of Obama, and his recent world tour was supposed to fix it. It did not. There's really no way Obama is going to improve his status against McCain on this particular issue. The public made up its mind about McCain years ago, and it is highly unlikely that it's going to change. Americans love their war heroes, even if they don't particularly like war itself. Obama's best bet is to divert the attention from this issue and try to focus on things that suit him more, like playing the race card and pandering to his ignorant base about the environment and socialist policies.
Americans are afraid of this scenario, Barack H. Obama as commander-in-chief. The New York Times and CBS News released a poll this week; in it, Americans answered detailed questions about this possibility.
The poll's answers shocked the strategists at the Obama campaign headquarters in Chicago. An intensive international travel schedule for Obama and a refocus of the campaign's message on defense and foreign policy speaks to this fear.
The poll says Americans consider him lacking in the abilities necessary to run the armed services. Conversely, the polls show John McCain blows Obama out of the water as a good commander-in-chief. Forty-six percent of respondents thought McCain would very likely "be effective" as commander-in-chief, as opposed to only 24 percent saying the same of Obama. In fact, 36 percent think it is "not likely" Obama will be effective in the position.
Obama's talents lie in his gift of oratory and his ability to move people with emotion, but this does not necessarily make for a good commander. The chief executive's job requires forward thinking, realistic assessments of the world's threats, and the maturity to make judgments in a crisis.
The USS Gerald R. Ford, an aircraft carrier, is now under construction in Hampton Roads, Va. It will be ready to join the fleet in 2015, replacing a carrier launched 47 years ago. Do we know that the USS Ford will be needed in 2015?
No, we do not. But can we afford to bet against it?
Obama thinks so. According to his own campaign literature, he is willing to let the USS Ford, and many more of tomorrow's defense technologies, rust at the pier.
The decision to build the aircraft carrier is based on the concept of preparing America for the next war to come. Commanders must anticipate the evil designs of irrational lunatics. It's always a tricky business, trying to anticipate future unknowns. Nevertheless, the president's oath is to protect and defend the United States.
A president who hasn't had any experience in military strategic planning is going to find himself in deep trouble if he finds his strategic armories empty in the face of an advancing enemy.
A review of Obama's national defense plans offers insight into his preparedness to meet today's and tomorrow's defense realities. Obama makes a variety of claims which we think would dramatically weaken America if enacted. The Obama plans include cutting tens of billions of dollars of the Defense Department budget, and the development of no new weapons in space to protect satellites and strategic assets. He plans cuts in missile defense systems, slowing our development of future combat systems, developing no new nuclear weapons, and negotiating with Russia to take our ICBMs off what he calls "hair-trigger alert". He advocates deep cuts in our nuclear program.
Not only does Obama have dangerous disarmament plans for America, he sorely lacks in experience. Besides being a junior senator, he has not been on any of the major defense committees. He has no previous hands-on experience with the military nor has he spent time with the men and women of our armed forces.
There are hundreds of weapon systems that could, under the quick-to-cut hand of Obama, be eliminated before they had the chance to prove themselves. If Obama had been in charge when the M1A1 Abrams Main Battle Tank was under development (a huge financial problem for the military) he would have cut it. But its developers persisted, and dollars that might have been considered "waste" by Obama were spent until the M1A1 became the most lethal, most respected, most effective tank on the battlefield.
Ask any Abrams crew member who has survived direct hits by explosive shells and rocket-propelled grenades if he would have canceled the Abrams, and the answer will be a resounding "No!"
Obama's perfect future vision enables him to scrap defense programs, even as our nation's enemies prepare very nasty projectiles to hurtle across continents and oceans.
Will he be able to effectively deal with crazed terrorists and power-hungry leaders with nuclear weapons in hand? Recent polls show Americans are nervous about Obama as commander-in-chief, and rightly so.
There's my two cents.
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