The Hillary Clinton Doctrine [View all]
Her response to the massacre in Orlando reveals the type of commander in chief she would be.
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/cover_story/2016/06/the_hillary_clinton_doctrine_what_orlando_reveals_about_her_approach_to.html
This is an excellent and thoughtful, if long, read. It should be read through completely.
The Republican, Donald Trump, proved himself an empty suit with a loud mouth, a set of dangerously shallow ideas, and an ego enormous enough to mistake them for wisdom. Hillary Clinton delivered a very different sort of speech. She was measured and thoughtful, unifying in places and aggressive in others, scrupulous about getting the analysis and the action right. You might call it a presidential address.
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More recently, in her speech in Cleveland on June 13, the day after the Orlando shootings, Clinton first noted that not all the facts were yet known about the shooter, Omar Mateen (was he inspired by ISIS or a troubled, violent homophobe who used jihadist social media as an excuse to vent his self-hatred?), and she invoked the fundamental unity and tolerance of American society. Then she laid out her plan for defeating ISIS. It involved ramping up the air campaign in Syria and Iraq, accelerating support for Arab and Kurdish soldiers on the ground, pressing ahead with the diplomatic efforts to settle sectarian political divisions, and pushing our partners in the region to do even more, not least pressuring the Saudis, Qataris, and Kuwaitis to stop funding extremist organizations. At home, she called for an intelligence surge, upping the budgets of intelligence and law enforcement agencies, improving their coordination on a local and federal level, working with Silicon Valley to track and analyze jihadist recruiters on social media networks, and working with responsible leaders in Muslim neighborhoods (rather than alienating them by suggestingas Trump did, in his speech on the same daythat all American Muslims are somehow complicit in the actions of extremists).
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Which leads to a larger pointthat, in their basic policies and outlook on the world, the differences between Obama and Clinton are relatively minor. Even Mark Landler, whose book chronicles their competing views on military power, acknowledges in his first chapter that, during her time as secretary of state, she and Obama agreed more than they disagreed. Both preferred diplomacy to brute force. Both shunned the unilateralism of the Bush years. Both are lawyers committed to preserving the rules-based order that the United States put in place after 1945. Their disputes, he writes, stemmed mainly from their very different instincts for how to save this post-WWII order as it has fractured in the aftermath of the Cold War.
Their common ground is highlighted by their common, stark contrast with Donald Trump. The rules-based order that Clinton and Obama both cherish holds no interest for Trump; nor does he seem to know anything about its history, its institutions, or its value to American security.