Hillary Clinton's incomprehensible foreign policy ideas ramble on.
She chastised Barack Obama for his naieve willingness to enter discussions with America's enemies without preconditions, but now she is willing to do just that with Iran. Clinton stated that as soon as she is elected president she "would immediately open a diplomatic negotiation with Iran over all issues that we disagree with them on."
Yet at the same town hall meeting in South Carolina in which she made this faux pas, she also declared that Iranian actions to cut off oil supplies would invite military action:
"I will make it very clear to the Iranians that there are very serious consequences attached to their actions," Clinton said. The presidential candidate spoke at a town hall meeting with 300 people at a high school in a Democratic stronghold in early voting South Carolina.
The New York senator, responding to a question, said blocking oil shipments "would be devastating to the world economy."
If the U.S. took military action as a result, she said, "I would hope that the world would see that was an action of last resort, not first resort. Because we need the world to agree with us about the threat that Iran poses to everyone."
I am so torn here, do we cheer her or boo her for this? Is it possible, as Charles Krauthammer points out, that Hillary Clinton as president, may lurch into doing the correct thing albeit for the wrong reasons? Her willingness to take on the Iranians over oil is obviously not the product of any understanding of security issues, as her willingness to negotiate with the Iranians without preconditions shows. She is just tossing this out there because it tested well in focus groups, or because it sounded good to her at the time. It is clearly not the product of serious foreign policy analysis.
3 comments:
Ken, Hillary would do and say anything to insure she becomes the first woman President. She makes me so sick! Please tell me her chances are slim to none...
I can't tell you that Zsa Zsa, she can win.
I still think it is more likely she will lose, however.
ironically, you mispelled the word naive.
Post a Comment