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Outside View: Ready, aim fire!
by Harlan Ullman
Washington (UPI) Oct 17, 2012

In one sense, both candidates suffer from the same weakness -- the preference for policy made on a "ready, fire, aim" basis and not more thoughtful analysis and reflection. Image courtesy AFP.

Tuesday's presidential debate and the remaining encounter aren't the best formats for getting real answers to very tough and even intractable issues facing this and most other nations round the globe.

The reasons for this absence of substance are self-evident. If the challenges were easy, they would have already been solved. And, despite the best intentions, the United States' political process and government are badly broken by a mix of partisanship, unyielding ideological differences and the nature of a system of checks and balances that cannot work without a spirit of compromise that has been too long missing in action.

None of these overarching realities was or will be discussed in the debates. Instead, Mitt Romney declared President Barack Obama and his policies as gross failures and promised that a Romney administration will do much better.

The president countered with a defense of his administration that took office having to clean up the utter mess left behind by George W. Bush from a financial meltdown to unfinished and disastrous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

As a result, these debates became political theater and not a serious way to make serious and informed judgments about the candidates.

In one sense, both candidates suffer from the same weakness -- the preference for policy made on a "ready, fire, aim" basis and not more thoughtful analysis and reflection.

Take, for example, Obama's labeling of the war in Afghanistan as the "good war" and the conflict in Iraq as the "bad one." The rationale was made in 2008 and the context of winning the presidential campaign -- attacking the Republican opposition for launching a war to eliminate weapons of mass destruction that had ceased to exist while ignoring the plight of the Afghans after the Taliban had been (temporarily) driven from power.

Obama was half right about Afghanistan. But the half wrong has led to an Iraq that favors Iran over the United States; supports Syria; and will continue to exacerbate the Sunni-Shiite split in the Muslim world.

The administration rightly argues that the basis for the withdrawal was begun by the Bush administration and that demanding a longer-term presence in Iraq could have collapsed the current Maliki government. But so what? It is hard to conceive an Iraqi government less friendly to the United States and the West than Maliki's, made more by grating by the loss of lives and hundreds of billions if not trillion dollars wasted on this ill-founded crusade.

Then, to make matters worse, in its first few months in office, the Obama administration launched its Afghanistan-Pakistan study to determine a strategy for the "good war." The strategy was profoundly flawed beginning with the name which reversed priorities.

The key is and was Pakistan. Now, from that flawed relationship, we see an Afghanistan that could be close to civil war once NATO and U.S. forces leave and a Pakistan riddled with the worst excesses of Taliban and Salafist extremism.

In the campaign, Romney has criticized Obama's "leading from behind" in Libya; not assisting Syrian rebels and opponents of Bashar Assad (as if we know who the "good guys" are); and for tacitly failing to provide security for Ambassador Chris Stevens, ambushed and killed in Benghazi, Libya, last month.

Unfortunately, these charges miss the larger failures of the Obama administration and how to correct them.

Romney could have provided powerful intellectual and strategic critiques to the Obama foreign and defense policies. He did not.

Much has been made of the former governor's extraordinary promise to label China a "currency manipulator" the first day in office (while ignoring the Federal Reserve's quantitative easing manipulations) or calling Russia "our main geopolitical foe." That may prove to be merely rhetoric.

Where Romney has gone hard aground is in his accusation that the Obama administration is wrecking defense by his cuts and that a Romney administration will increase military spending to 4 percent of gross domestic product, including building 15 warships a year and maintaining a carrier task force in the eastern Mediterranean.

Currently, in constant dollars, the United States spends more on defense than at the height of the Reagan buildup. More centrally, Romney doesn't explain why we need more for defense nor where the funds are to be found, except possibly through borrowing from China. And, as an aside, carrier task groups date back to the 1980s, perhaps reflecting Romney's thinking -- the correct name is carrier strike groups!

What does this mean? U.S. politics are about campaigning and winning elections not about governing. A serious, fact-based debate on both domestic and foreign policy issues is sorely needed.

Will we get one? Possibly on a "ready, fire, aim" basis. But not one that will actually provide for the common defense or provide for the nation what it really needs.

(Harlan Ullman is chairman of the Killowen Group, which advises leaders of government and business, and senior adviser at Washington's Atlantic Council.)

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)

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Obama dismisses Romney tough talk on China
Hempstead, New York (AFP) Oct 17, 2012 - US President Barack Obama dismissed Mitt Romney's tough talk on China at their second debate, as the two sparred over how to handle ties with the world's number two economy.

China policy has emerged as a key issue in the race for the White House, with Obama mocking his foe's record of making money on overseas investments and Romney countering that the Democratic incumbent has been soft on Beijing.

"Governor, you're the last person who's going to get tough on China," Obama said at Tuesday's debate after Romney repeated his promise to crack down on Beijing over its widely criticized trade practices and currency policy.

"When he talks about getting tough on China, keep in mind that Governor Romney invested in companies that were pioneers of outsourcing to China, and is currently investing in companies that are building surveillance equipment for China to spy on its own folks," Obama said.

Obama's aggressive response may have referred to a story his campaign has highlighted recently -- a New York Times article from earlier this year that laid out how Bain Capital, the private equity firm founded by Romney, was profiting from investments in Chinese companies.

The Times detailed how a Bain-run fund in which a Romney blind trust has holdings bought the video surveillance division of a Chinese firm that says it is the largest supplier to a monitoring system that allows Beijing to watch over schools, hospitals, and theaters.

In a web video released last month, the Obama campaign also accused Romney of investing in Youku, the Chinese equivalent of YouTube, which it described as a haven for pirated US videos, and of backing a Chinese firm accused of pirating Microsoft software.

Romney made a point of returning to the issue of China multiple times during the fiery town hall-style debate at Hofstra University in New York -- the second of three debates before the November 6 vote.

"China has been a currency manipulator for years and years," Romney said, lambasting Obama for not labeling Beijing as such.

"On day one, I will label China a currency manipulator... We'll make sure people we trade with around the world play by the rules."

Obama fired back, saying the yuan had appreciated during his time in office "because we have pushed them hard, put unprecedented trade pressure on China, and that will help create jobs here."

Critics in the United States and other developed economies accuse Beijing of deliberately devaluing its currency to boost its exports, devastating the manufacturing industry elsewhere.

The Obama administration has repeatedly urged Beijing to let the yuan appreciate, but has stopped short of declaring China a currency manipulator -- a designation that could trigger sanctions and perhaps an all-out trade war.

The Chinese yuan hit a record high against the US dollar on Friday -- 6.2640 to the greenback -- in what analysts said could be a response to US political pressure.

The world's two biggest economies have lodged a number of complaints against each other in the World Trade Organization -- part of Washington's bid to use trade rules to tamp down China's huge bilateral trade surplus.

Romney did not shy away from the issue of his own foreign investments.

"Any investments I have made over the last eight years have been by blind trusts and they include investments outside of the United States, including Chinese companies," the Republican White House hopeful said.

He then challenged the president. "Have you looked at your pension?" he said, adding that Obama too has investments in China.

"I don't look at my pension," Obama shot back. "It's not as big as yours. I don't check it that often."



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