Over the weekend, there was a lot of buzz about whether Mitt
Romney might tap Condoleeza Rice as his running mate. Oof. I
hope not! In fact, Romney should do
himself a favor and distance himself as far as possible from anyone associated
with the Bush administration.
Rice was the National Security Advisor for what were arguably
among this nation's worst national security decisions ever. On her watch, we under-committed manpower to
the war effort in Afghanistan and then invaded Iraq in a war of choice, on the
pretext of what turned out to be cherry-picked,
unreliable intelligence. And then, to top it all off, we attempted to
"export democracy" to both countries, an ill-conceived venture that
only resulted in dragging both wars out for a decade, with Afghanistan still
ongoing today. Rice may be a brilliant
scholar, but someone down in the mud under the Ivory Tower could have told her
that wars in distant landlocked countries are the most difficult and expensive to
undertake, and should therefore be conducted with swift and punishing force,
and concluded just as quickly. A country
should never be left as an ungoverned area - that only invites more security
problems - but it is far more efficient to employ stabilization measures that fit
the local culture and conditions, than to devote years, and American blood and
treasure, attempting to impose a form of government that is neither a true
democracy, nor suited to the people it governs.
That is not a good national security decision, in either the short term or
in the long term.
Then there were the controversies surrounding the US
interpretation of the Geneva Conventions, the establishment of the never-ending
Gordian knot of a prison at Guantanamo, secret "renditions" of
terrorism suspects to third-party countries, and the whole definition of
torture (hint: the Americans hold that the same actions constituted torture,
when the Japanese
were doing them to us during WWII; sorry, but they don't magically become
okay when we do it, and this has cost us a huge amount of respect and standing
in the world). Of course Rice did not
personally make all of these decisions, but as a key Cabinet member and
advisor, she bears a significant portion of the administration's collective responsibility
for them, good and bad.
Unfortunately, just about every key leader in the Bush administration
remains surrounded by a huge amount of negative controversy thanks to the Iraq
and Afghanistan wars: Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz,
Feith - even Colin Powell. Rice is no
exception. If Romney has been paying a
lick of attention to national and world events since 2001, he should know that
not only is Rice not a great pick to run for Vice President, but he needs to avoid
any obvious associations with the whole Bush crowd. And that means - yes - the Cheney-sponsored
fundraiser of 12 July may have been a political mistake.
And to surround himself with the same principals that surrounded G.W. Bush would be more than a political mistake; it could well be a national security mistake.
