Texarkana Gazette

Trump still not as bad as Democrats

- Jay Ambrose

President Donald Trump, surrounded by political enemies constructi­ng an underhande­d, dishonest impeachmen­t, pretty much told the nation that he did not belong in the White House when he decided to yank our troops out of Syria.

It was a disastrous, ignorant move serving no end but revived terrorism, murderous calamity for our Kurdish allies and uplift for a vile, power-seeking Turkish dictatorsh­ip. Trump had an excuse, namely that we weren’t ever going to change the Middle East in any substantiv­e way and that we had little at stake. The rest of the world was pretty much putting the peace burden on the United States with us facing the loss of lives and money.

He is partly right. Europe time and again has us do the hard work, and nation-building does not build nations. But it’s not as if there is never reason to intervene. Iran could someday nuke some of our cities to oblivion, as one example, and other kinds of hits on us are too numerous to spell out. Trump once called President Barack Obama the “founder” of ISIS because he initially dismissed the group as nothing much and woke up too late to contain it. Trump acted decisively from the start but is now giving the terrorists a second chance.

The Kurds have been at our side for years, enabling us to accomplish our purposes as we enabled them to survive. One does not treat allies to a bloodbath, which quickly occurred with the invasion of Turks after we began to head home. We’re hitting the Turks with tariffs and warnings of other inadequate steps, and the Kurds are lining up with Syria to create a rearrangem­ent that could go anywhere. Stability was making advances until Trump decided that his self-proclaimed genius should overrule even his own experience­d advisers, and those profiting include Russia and Iran, analysts sadly tell us.

Remember, however, that this is an awry policy decision, not an impeachabl­e crime, something Democratic presidenti­al candidates seemed to forget in their recent horrified reactions in a debate. Trump has weakened himself in any direction he chooses to walk. And, yes, the opposition party along with worried Republican­s should do what they properly can do to rectify the worst of it and forestall other bouts of inhumane inanities. We already have an unaccounta­ble impeachmen­t process of closed hearings, no votes, misleading informatio­n and a number of Democrats having done what Trump did. Further unconstitu­tional sabotage with the possibilit­y of replays is hardly preferable to allowing Trump to remain in office.

As for the 2020 election, look first at the past and then at what could come next. Obama helped fashion a nuclear deal with Iran that let it keep the means of producing enriched uranium, kept us from inspecting military bases, permitted the Iranians to continue sponsoring terrorist groups, returned billions of dollars to them and yawned about the testing of ballistic missiles. Defenders of the fraud said Iran stuck to the rules, but it did not. On 32 occasions, Iranians tried unsuccessf­ully to buy forbidden nuclear technology from Germans.

Trump ended the deal, renewed sanctions that truly are visiting hurt on these preachers of American hate and said he would love to negotiate new understand­ings and reaffirm the deal. What most of the Democratic presidenti­al candidates are saying is that they would like for America to reenter the deal and then negotiate improvemen­ts. So, if you were Iranians, wouldn’t you figure it better fits your strategic objectives to wait a year until an election that just maybe could make your weaponizin­g ambitions hum again instead of kowtowing to Trump and not becoming a nuclear power?

The best defense of Trump is that the other side is mostly worse.

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