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The Clinton-Obama-Bush Doctrine

Editorial of The New York Sun | November 19, 2007

The big news out of the most recent Democratic presidential debate was that two of the leading Democratic candidates, Senator Clinton and Senator Obama, endorsed the Bush Doctrine that is at the core of our current president's foreign policy. We haven't seen it reported anywhere else, but it's a big story. Here's what Mrs. Clinton said: "There's absolutely a connection between a democratic regime and heightened security for the United States." Here's what Mr. Obama said: "The more we see repression, the more there are no outlets for how people can express themselves and their aspirations, the worse off we're going to be, and the more anti-American sentiment there's going to be in the Middle East."

Or, as President Bush has put it in enunciating what has come to be known as the Bush Doctrine: "For decades, free nations tolerated oppression in the Middle East for the sake of stability. In practice, this approach brought little stability and much oppression, so I have changed this policy." Or, as he put it again, "Some who call themselves realists question whether the spread of democracy in the Middle East should be any concern of ours. But the realists in this case have lost contact with a fundamental reality: America has always been less secure when freedom is in retreat; America is always more secure when freedom is on the march."

Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama spoke their share of silliness during the debate, and they lost no opportunity to criticize the president. But the comments they made about the connection between freedom, democracy, and American national security are a reminder though it may be fashionable to talk about how divided America is, there is a broad consensus on certain key principles, a consensus that extends from Mr. Bush on the right to Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton on the left.

It's fashionable, too, these days, to disparage Mr. Bush. But when historians assess the successes of his presidency, the far-sighted among them will surely count as one of his signal accomplishments that he shifted the debate on freedom and democracy and security in the Middle East so decisively that even his political opponents were conducting their debate on his terms. It is one of the president's great contributions, not only to American security but to human liberty.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

For those of us who have turned against the president, this is no news at all. Bush has bought into... [MORE]

Troy Doby 

Nov 19, 2007 11:59

Thanks for being honest enough to print the truth. God bless you

[MORE]

Bud Cline 

Nov 19, 2007 11:54

While I am generally in favor of some kind of term limits, Clearly the American Public of WW2 Days were... [MORE]

Marvin Lange 

Nov 19, 2007 11:01

Although Senators Obama and Clinton did support the Bush Doctrine in their last debate, most likely unaware they were doing... [MORE]

howard lohmuller 

Nov 19, 2007 09:45

This editorial exhibits and incredibly poor understanding of history. As early as Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points, American presidents have observed... [MORE]

Peter Goff 

Nov 19, 2007 09:32

It is not valid to consider Bush the first to consider democratic societies more friendly to other democratic societies. Nor... [MORE]

Thom 

Nov 19, 2007 09:31

When President Bush was elected, I recall how the press jeered and made fun of him for feeling he was... [MORE]

Kathy Washburn 

Nov 19, 2007 08:27

I find it amazing that a newspaper has the courage to speak the truth. I wonder when the Sun will... [MORE]

Gene 

Nov 19, 2007 07:34

Heresy to speak the truth sometimes. Democracy cannot do everything and certainly has its limits as we saw with the... [MORE]

Don L 

Nov 19, 2007 05:43

What the New York Sun calls "The Clinton-Obama-Bush Doctrine" is simply a reissue of Woodrow Wilson's "Make the World Safe... [MORE]

George N Spitz 

Nov 19, 2007 05:26

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