Contrasting Jack Bauer with Barack Obama
You know things are bad when you can’t wait for the return of a TV character to demonstrate what resolve and leadership really look like. Yes, after a four-year hiatus, the show 24, featuring Jack Bauer (played by Kiefer Sutherland), returns May 5 to the Fox network.
Bauer displays many of the traits once found in, or at least expected of, American presidents and top military leaders. He doesn’t waffle or wiggle; neither does he negotiate. He wins. If you think I am about to draw a contrast between Bauer and the current president of the United States, you are right.
The headlines are depressing: “Obama suffers setbacks in Japan and the Mideast” (New York Times); “Pentagon: [Defense Secretary Chuck] Hagel’s Russian counterpart won’t return his calls” [Fox News]; and these two from the May issue of Commentary Magazine: “China rises as America weakens” and “He’s made it worse: Obama’s Middle East.”
President Obama is detached, uninterested, and inexperienced in foreign affairs and the world has taken notice. Russian President Vladimir Putin calculated he could get away with meddling in Ukraine because he perceived weakness in the president of the United States. And, in fact, the first wave of U.S. and European sanctions against Russia proved him right. They were nothing short of laughable. Does the West really think it can fell a Russian bear with a water pistol?
The only thing I learned in a physics class before flunking it was that nature abhors a vacuum and will fill it if given the opportunity. The same is true in foreign policy. That’s what “Peace Through Strength” in the Reagan era was about. There was a reason the Ayatollah Khomeini ordered the release of American hostages on Inauguration Day 1981. He seemed to believe Ronald Reagan might attack if Iran kept Americans as prisoners.
While Obama plays numerous rounds of golf and the military fiddles with issues like women in combat and whether taxpayers should pay for convicted intelligence leaker Bradley (now Chelsea) Manning’s gender transition, Putin acts. The Middle East is in flames—diplomatically and literally—because this administration has no discernible foreign policy other than criticizing Israel.
As the world changes and new challenges arise, American foreign policy must adapt. Past failures should be scrapped. Past successes should be remembered and replicated.
The first and most important step must be for the United States to declare who we are as a country and to define our purpose in the world. Presidents are supposed to do this. Somewhere between isolationism and interventionism is a U.S. policy waiting to be discovered.
“Freedom” may mean one thing to us, but it means something quite different in other parts of the world. In Russia, which has a long history of autocratic leaders who have traded freedom for a minimal standard of living, American-style freedom is not universally embraced. In many Muslim lands, freedom means Sharia law. Applying American principles to that world has caused frustration, even failure.
If the president fails to articulate who we are to fellow Americans and the world—and there is little evidence he knows how, or even wants to—the United States will lose its leadership role. The hostile forces willing to take its place—China, Russia, and radical Islam—will bring with them consequences we will not like and threats to our national security we may not be able to repel.
Perhaps Jack Bauer can again inspire as he did when 24 premiered in November 2001, two months after the terrorist attacks on America. Sometimes fiction is stranger than truth.
Listen to a Cal Thomas commentary on this topic on The World and Everything in It:
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