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Re: Why Hagel Matters This gets a ten (10) star post! **********!!!!!

By: joe-taylor in FFFT | Recommend this post (0)
Mon, 07 Jan 13 8:59 PM | 46 view(s)
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Msg. 49088 of 65535
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Re: Why Hagel Matters This gets a ten (10) star post! **********!!!!!


To say that "God exists" is the greatest understatement ever made across space and time.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Why Hagel Matters
By: clo
in FFFT
Mon, 07 Jan 13 6:20 PM
Msg. 49086 of 65535

Why Hagel Matters
by Peter Beinart Jan 7, 2013 4:45 AM EST

If the former senator is confirmed over Republican objections as Obama’s new secretary of defense, it could signal the beginning of a new era in American foreign policy, says Peter Beinart.

If media reports are true, Barack Obama will soon nominate Chuck Hagel to be secretary of defense. If so, it may prove the most consequential foreign-policy appointment of his presidency. Because the struggle over Hagel is a struggle over whether Obama can change the terms of foreign-policy debate.

.....
What makes Hagel so important, and so threatening to the Republican foreign-policy elite, is that he is one of the few prominent Republican-aligned politicians and commentators (George Will and Francis Fukuyama are others, but such voices are rare) who was intellectually changed by Iraq. And Hagel was changed, in large measure, because he bore within him intellectual (and physical) scar tissue from Vietnam. As my former colleague John Judis captured brilliantly in a 2007 New Republic profile,

the Iraq War sparked something visceral in Hagel, as the former Vietnam rifleman realized that, once again, detached and self-interested elites were sending working-class kids like himself to die in a war they couldn’t honestly defend. 
It is certainly true that some politicians who served in Vietnam—for instance, John McCain—did not react to Iraq that way. But it is also true that the fact that so few American politicians and pundits lived the kind of wartime hell Hagel endured made it easier for them to pass through the Iraq years unscathed. It’s no coincidence that the other senator most deeply enraged by Iraq was ex-Marine James Webb, another former hawkish Republican who saw the war through his own personal Vietnam prism.
At the heart of the opposition to Hagel is the fear that he will do what Republicans have thus far largely prevented: bring America’s experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan into the Iran debate. 

MUCH more:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/01/07/why-hagel-matters.html?utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&utm_campaign=cheatsheet_morning&cid=newsletter%3Bemail%3Bcheatsheet_morning&utm_term=Cheat%20Sheet


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