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Sunday, September 21, 2014

Obama’s half-hearted war on terror

Obama’s half-hearted war on terror

The quote of the week comes from James Clapper, the director of national intelligence. Noting that criticism of surveillance programs forced the government to “throttle back,” he told The Washington Post that means “we are accepting more risk.”

Tapping a deep well of sarcasm, he continued: “We are supposed to keep the country safe, predict anticipatory intelligence, with no risk, and no embarrassment if revealed, and without a scintilla of jeopardy to privacy of any domestic person or foreign person. We call that ‘immaculate collection.’ ”

Bingo!

Clapper’s mission-impossible statement is more than justified, and not just in matters of intelligence gathering. He might have been talking about the public’s view of fighting terrorism, too.

Americans are against terrorism, wholeheartedly. And want to do something about it — halfheartedly.

As such, the public has been in sync with the president, meaning we have the government we deserve.

Barack Obama’s heart was never in the war on terror, and he burst onto the national scene with an anti-Iraq War riff. He called it a “dumb war,” a phrase that echoes still in his foreign-policy slogan of “don’t do stupid stuff.” The latest declaration, “No boots on the ground,” is cut from the same cloth. As faculty-lounge wordsmiths go, he’s top shelf.

Voters were with him big time in 2008, and a majority stayed with him in 2012 as he promised to get out of Afghanistan, too. He had OK’d the assassination of Osama bin Laden, a fact he waved like a bloody scalp, and it shielded him from direct hits after the Benghazi terror attack.

His mistake, or his latest mistake, was that he began to take his Houdini-like escapes for granted, and thus was gob-smacked when the “war-weary nation” suddenly wanted a tougher president after the Islamic State beheaded two Americans. In a flash, the usually nimble president was way out of step with the country.

Yet Obama again proved himself a cynical politician worthy of a fickle public. After some flub-a-dubs, he announced a strategy that is true to his core. It is neither-nor.

It is neither a strategy for victory, nor a strategy for doing nothing. Like a man taking a shower while wearing a raincoat, he put America back into the fight without a commitment to win.

Military types say his big goal and his puny tools are a mismatch, which could mean he has been too clever by half. It’s likely he is underestimating the terrorists’ lust for blood and overestimating his ability to fool voters into thinking he is resolute.

If the terrorists are serious about creating their caliphate, and if we do not become serious about stopping them, Obama could remain out of step for the rest of his term. If things go badly enough, he could be tagged as the president who lost the war on terror.

Then again, that, too, depends on the capricious public. If the lately rediscovered demand for a strong American role in the world has staying power, both parties will have to join Obama in playing catch-up. Congress and the 2016 candidates will be forced to get on board with the new national spirit of global leadership.

But for now, Clapper’s sarcasm about intelligence gathering describes a nation that wants to be safe, as long as it’s not too much trouble and doesn’t require sacrifice.

Something has to give. If Obama won’t do it, those who hope to succeed him must talk honestly and straight to the public.

They must state a simple truth that goes like this: My fellow Americans, we can’t have it both ways.

All under the bridge

Stop the presses! The feds find no evidence that Chris Christie knew anything about Bridgegate.

If you didn’t see the story, you’re not alone. After months of banner headlines touting phony scoops and hyped “evidence,” the lack of a smoking e-mail is reported as an afterthought.

That’s not journalism. That’s politics masquerading as journalism.

Contempt for cops unmasked

It’s come to this. The NYPD calls a meeting with the costumed characters hassling tourists in Times Square, and the emboldened Elmos tell the cops to buzz off.

Most of the pesky characters skipped the cops’ effort to teach them the rules, and those who showed brought a lawyer. “They don’t respect us, so we can’t respect them,” one “Batman” told The Post.

Obviously, the attacks on cops, from the mayor, the courts and Al Sharpton, are eroding basic respect for the Finest.

This is bad and spells trouble if more people think they can ignore police orders. Already de Blasio had to remind New Yorkers they have no right to resist arrest.

Gee, let’s see now, where did people get the idea that cops are the bad guys?

Blasio bringing highs to new low

With their plan to scrap the test for the elite eight high schools blocked, the social engineers at City Hall now want to open the test scoring to manipulation.

They should stop pussyfooting around and be honest about what they really want: racial quotas.

Mayor de Blasio and Chancellor Carmen Fariña are surrendering hope that larger numbers of black and Latino students can meet the tough standards to get into Stuyvesant, Bronx Science and six other schools. Instead, they’re embracing what George W. Bush called the “soft bigotry of low expectations.”

Lower the standards, they are saying, because high standards penalize poor, nonwhite children. They want to create loopholes, such as an essay, so scores can be manipulated and admissions tilted by race and ethnic weighting.

They have it exactly backward. Keeping standards high and helping kids meet them is the way to raise performance. Lowering the bar is a feel-good illusion that robs students of the chance to lift themselves up and be better prepared for college and careers.

The sad part is that many poor, nonwhite youngsters are excellent students, but de Blasio and Fariña refuse to recognize them. Asian students, most of them impoverished immigrants, are disproportionately represented at elite schools; they comprise 70 percent of students at Stuyvesant and Bronx Science, but only about 15 percent of the total student population.

And the best charter schools aren’t closing the racial gap — they’re eliminating it. The scores of some schools dominated by black and Latino students in recent exams were tops in the state.

A mayor and a chancellor who prized excellence would be studying those examples and copying the formulas so all kids could succeed. Instead, City Hall fights success and promotes mediocrity and quotas.

Talk about dumb.

What about ‘baba?

Count me as suspicious when Wall Street falls in love with a company named after a mythical Arab who stole from thieves. If Chinese Internet company Alibaba turns out to be a house of cards, investors can’t say they weren’t warned.


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