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Are you confused as to exactly WHY Palin's ignorance of the Bush Doctrine is so important? And telling?
The Palin interview
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"It is embarrassing to have to spell this out, but for the record let me explain why Gov. Palin's answer to the "Bush Doctrine" question -- the only part of the recent interview I have yet seen over here in China -- implies a disqualifying lack of preparation for the job.
Not the mundane job of vice president, of course, which many people could handle. Rather the job of potential Commander in Chief and most powerful individual on earth.
The spelling-out is lengthy, but I've hidden most of it below the jump.
Each of us has areas we care about, and areas we don't. If we are interested in a topic, we follow its development over the years. And because we have followed its development, we're able to talk and think about it in a "rounded" way. We can say: Most people think X, but I really think Y. Or: most people used to think P, but now they think Q. Or: the point most people miss is Z. Or: the question I'd really like to hear answered is A.
Here's the most obvious example in daily life: Sports Talk radio.
Mention a name or theme -- Brett Favre, the Patriots under Belichick, Lance Armstrong's comeback, Venus and Serena -- and anyone who cares about sports can have a very sophisticated discussion about the ins and outs and myth and realities and arguments and rebuttals.
People who don't like sports can't do that. It's not so much that they can't identify the names -- they've heard of Armstrong -- but they've never bothered to follow the flow of debate. I like sports -- and politics and tech and other topics -- so I like joining these debates. On a wide range of other topics -- fashion, antique furniture, the world of restaurants and fine dining, or (blush) opera -- I have not been interested enough to learn anything I can add to the discussion. So I embarrass myself if I have to express a view.
What Sarah Palin revealed is that she has not been interested enough in world affairs to become minimally conversant with the issues. Many people in our great land might have difficulty defining the "Bush Doctrine" exactly. But not to recognize the name, as obviously was the case for Palin, indicates not a failure of last-minute cramming but a lack of attention to any foreign-policy discussion whatsoever in the last seven years.
Two details in Charles Gibson's posing of the question were particularly telling. One was the potentially confusing way in which he first asked it. On the page, "the Bush Doctrine" looks different from "the Bush doctrine." But when hearing the question Palin might not have known whether Gibson was referring to the general sweep of Administration policy -- doctrine with small d -- or the rationale that connected 9/11 with the need to invade Iraq, the capital-D Doctrine. So initial confusion would be understandable -- as if a sports host asked about Favre's chances and you weren't sure if he meant previously with the Packers or with the Jets. Once Gibson clarified the question, a person familiar with the issue would have said, "Oh, if we're talking about the strategy that the President and Condoleezza Rice began laying out in 2002...." There was no such flash of recognition.
The other was Gibson's own minor mis-statement. American foreign policy has long recognized the concept of preemptive action: if you know somebody is just about to attack you, there's no debate about the legitimacy of acting first. (This is like "shooting in self-defense.") The more controversial part of The Bush Doctrine was the idea of preventive war: acting before a threat had fully emerged, on the theory that waiting until it was fully evident would mean acting too late.
Gibson used the word "preemptively" -- but if a knowledgeable person had pushed back on that point ("Well, preemption was what John F. Kennedy had in mind in acting against the imminent threat of Soviet missiles in Cuba"), Gibson would certainly have come back to explain the novelty of the "preventive war" point. Because he knows the issue, a minor mis-choice of words wouldn't get in the way of his real intent.
Sarah Palin did not know this issue, or any part of it. The view she actually expressed -- an endorsement of "preemptive" action -- was fine on its own merits. But it is not the stated doctrine of the Bush Administration, it is not the policy her running mate has endorsed, and it is not the concept under which her own son is going off to Iraq.
How could she not know this? For the same reason I don't know anything about European football/soccer standings, player trades, or intrigue. I am not interested enough. And she evidently has not been interested enough even to follow the news of foreign affairs during the Bush era.
A further point. The truly toxic combination of traits GW Bush brought to decision making was:
1) Ignorance
2) Lack of curiosity
3) "Decisiveness"
That is, he was not broadly informed to begin with (point 1). He did not seek out new informat
That is, he was not broadly informed to begin with (point 1). He did not seek out new information (#2); but he nonetheless prided himself (#3) on making broad, bold decisions quickly, and then sticking to them to show resoluteness.
We don't know for sure about #2 for Palin yet -- she could be a sponge-like absorber of information. But we know about #1 and we can guess, from her demeanor about #3. Most of all we know something about the person who put her in this untenable role.
10 Answers
- Anonymous1 decade agoFavorite Answer
That is a lot of words, very nicely put together by Fallows, But in simpler terms: The policy that the US will engage in preventive war is the biggest change in US policy in our country's 232 years and for a VP candidate to either not be aware of it or to not have an opinion of it is totally unacceptable.
EDIT: Treading water, you didn't read it correctly.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
Wow yall, let's be honest...When he first asked her, it was a little unclear. However he then defined it as "the Bush doctrine, enunciated September 2002, before the Iraq war." There was a clear Bush Doctrine, and yes it is real for those of you who don't know. You can find it fully defined on Wikipedia if you don't believe me. Gibson said "As I understand it" because she was dancing around the question and it was obvious that she didn't know what the Bush Doctrine was. He was calling her out on not knowing policy. Look at her body language. She's usually standing straight with her head held high. When this question was asked, she was hunched over, head low, and shifting back and forth in her chair. We've all been put on the spot in school. You know there has been a time when the instructor called on you to explain something in the assigned reading you were supposed to have done and you had no idea what they were talking about. You know you had the same body language and shifted in your seat as you tried to avoid the real question so you wouldn't look stupid. She got caught not doing her homework and people need to stop making excuses for her and acknowledge that.
Source(s): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bush_Doctrine - Anonymous1 decade ago
EVERYbody in politics knows what the Bush Doctrine is. For a vp candidate to need the "d" capitalized for her is pathetic and scary.
She also said her National Security credentials "have to do with energy independence." OH! No wonder why she knows nothing about National Security. Cripes.
- tribeca_belleLv 71 decade ago
The point is that the Bush Doctrine, small letter or capital, had no meaning for Sarah Palin. Even after Gibson explained it to her, she gave a stupid answer.
You are right in concluding that this woman has had no interest in world affairs and it is obvious that she is not even bright enough to catch on when someone hands her a simple definition. She is not intellectually curious or intelligent.
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- nothingconstantLv 71 decade ago
Their newest thing is to deny a Bush Doctrine (with a capital D) ever existed.
How can she know what it means when it's never been around?!?!
I really recommend this one. It's from the military and explains it all for the people in denial.
http://www.carlisle.army.mil/usawc/parameters/03sp...
http://money.cnn.com/2002/04/24/commentary/dobbs/d...
http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/2002/02/01/nc...
Look at this article from 2002. Why I'll be. It did exist.
- 1 decade ago
I have found myself interested in politics for the first time , and really find it hard to believe how some politicians answer questions . What I find to be more troubling is that questions or never really anwsered but are excepted because of the ability of theses sales persons to spin .
- Stop RantingLv 51 decade ago
I'm not confused since, unlike the viewers who ignorantly bought into that nonsense, I am aware that there is no such thing as a "Bush Doctrine".
Didn't you grasp that Charlie Gibson said, "the Bush Doctrine, as I understand it". Even he has no idea what it is because it doesn't exist. What does "as I understand it" mean? If there is a doctrine, a rule or principle that forms the basis of a belief, theory, or policy, it would be very clear and universally understood. Even the liberal author of this article states that Gibson made mistakes describing what it was. Then the Author goes on to make up his own description. It's all fantasy.
The links provided by a poster below proves my point! The reporters description "But a good starting point would be the Bush Doctrine: you're either with the civilized world or against us in the war against terror."
Please list your source showing a doctrine written and released by Bush. If you can't provide that, perhaps a link to a credible news source showing when and where he said "the following is my doctrine". It doesn't exist and you know it.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
Did anyone read all of this?
(Why are we not calling it the Kennedy Doctrine? Didn't he use it against Cuba?)
- Anonymous1 decade ago
Good Lord~! Will you please get a grip? She understands the concept. She knows the issue. She just didnt know to what he was referring to when he called it the Bush Doctrine.