Kerry Needed a Debate Home Run, But Only Got a Single Editorial October 2004
by: Joseph M. Knippenberg
While theyll never admit it, the Kerry campaign has to be very disappointed with their candidates performance in Coral Gables Thursday night. With President Bush holding a steady lead in the polls, Kerry needed a solidnay, spectacularvictory to change the momentum of the race. He didnt get it. Charitable observers would call it a draw, at best. The Senator didnt look (note I didnt say "sound") utterly out of place on stage with the President, but he offered us no compelling reason why the incumbent should be given the boot.
Much of what Kerry had to say was a predictable, albeit toned-down, version of his standard campaign rhetoric. Iraq is a diversion from the war on terror, but we cant afford not to succeed there. That requires allies, so that were not suffering 90% of the casualties and paying 90% of the cost. Hence we need to hold "statesmanlike summits." As to the run-up to the war, the President has "not been candid" with the American people. He didnt engage in as much diplomacy as he saidor we expectedhe would; he didnt build the coalition he saidor we expectedhe would; he didnt plan as carefully as he saidor we expectedhe would.
This is incredibly weak tea. It doesnt energize the base, but, of course, that isnt the point. This is the "kinder, gentler" version of the Democratic critique, intended to appeal to folks who would be put off by the rabid Michael Moore version. It has the added benefit of apparently not offering President Bush any easy targets. If you dont actually say "Bush lied" about this and this and this, then he cant pin you down in response. But then "lying" or "misleading" amounts to not being the delicate negotiator and assiduous planner that John Kerry says he would have been, had he been in the Oval Office. To which George Bush could respond: guilty as charged, and isnt the world a better place because of it!
Of course, we did get a couple of hints that John Kerry has drunk deeply of the wells of Michael Moores wisdom. There were at least two references to the Ministry of Oil and one to Halliburton. But most of the fantasies in the debate bore the stamp of Kerrys mind alone. Which allies, beyond the usual suspects, are going to share our human and financial burdens in Iraq? The Germans, who have said in no uncertain terms that their troops will not set foot in Iraq, regardless of who the U.S. President is? The French, who want to confer with the terrorists about a timetable for U.S. withdrawal? The Russians, who have their hands full in Chechnya?
And if you look carefully at the numbers Kerry constantly repeated, his dishonesty or lack of close contact with reality becomes even clearer. The $200 billion he says were expending in Iraq includes funds for Afghanistan, where he says were not doing enough. So we should do more in Iraq to get the job done, but spend less to do it. How? And, by implication, we should spend more in Afghanistan and more on homeland security. Then theres the 90% figure, which doesnt take into account the terrible losses suffered by Iraqis fighting (or volunteering to fight) the Baathist thugs and foreign jihadis. Despite the fact that we should train more of them more quickly, they dont count as sharing our burden, at least not for the purpose of telling the American people the truth, as opposed to misleading them.
At this point, you, gentle reader, might be asking how some people might charitably rate the debate a draw. My answer: because George W. Bush doggedly stuck to his script, predictably pummeling Kerry for his inconsistency and inconstancy, he passed on some chances to fluster his opponent or pin him to the wall for his wishful thinking and misleading statements. Like Kerry, the President played it safe, choosing to reinforce the central message of his campaign: a man who surfs whichever way the wind blows does not inspire confidence in our troops or our allies, actual or putative. Perhaps there were a few viewers out there who hadnt heard that before. Now they have.
The closest thing to a knockout blow landed by the President was his response to John Kerrys rather surprising adoption of a version of preemption. It was Kerrys most "presidential" moment, but he quickly blew it: "if and when you do it
you have to do it in a way that passes the test, that passes the global test where your countrymen, your people understand fully why youre doing what youre doing and you can prove to the world that you did it for legitimate reasons." Now to Kerry this means more than announcing to a "candid world" your reasons; it seems to mean ultimately securing U.N. approval (or perhaps only that of the Frenchan unfortunate example, that). To which the President replies: "Im not exactly sure what you mean, passes the global test, you take preemptive action if you pass a global test. My attitude is you take preemptive action in order to protect the American people, that you act in order to make this country secure." You, Senator Kerry, are living in the 9-10 world; serious people are living in the days after 9-11.
Memo to the Bush campaign: if you can turn this exchange into the defining moment of the debate, then it wasnt nearly a draw. Maybe I wont lose much sleep this October.
Joseph M. Knippenberg is Professor of Politics and Associate Provost for Student Achievement at Oglethorpe University.
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