After
Obama’s deft introduction yesterday, the battle lines are clear. With
Republican military-diplomatic heavyweights like Robert Gates, Colin Powell and
Brent Scowcroft lining up to endorse him, what’s left in the anti-Hagel camp
are Tea Party diehards and the ancient grudges of John McCain.
After
his puppet Lindsey Graham’s attack on Hagel as an “in your face” move, McCain himself is lying back in the rhetorical tall weeds.
“Chuck
Hagel served our nation with honor in Vietnam and I congratulate him on this
nomination,” his former friend says. “I have serious concerns about positions
Senator Hagel has taken on a range of critical national security issues in
recent years, which we will fully consider in the course of his confirmation
process before the Senate Armed Services Committee.”
While
Hagel himself reaffirms his "unequivocal, total support for Israel"
and endorsement of tough economic sanctions against Iran while apologizing for an
insensitive anti-gay comment, critics are left with the acrobatic task of
indicting him for his growing opposition to Bush’s Iraq folly after voting to
authorize it in 2002 along with fellow Republicans.
Not
many Democrats are likely to be lured into opposing his designation in the face
of the President’s argument that Hagel will bring the hard-headed viewpoint of
a former non-commissioned officer into the brass-heavy halls of the Pentagon.
Barack
Obama wants him as Secretary of Defense and, barring any other adverse revelations,
will get him.
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