Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Debate Over US Foreign Policy Much ‘Ado’ About Nothing

- Maylon Rice

This past week, it seems, there will indeed be at least one televised debate in the much dramatized United States Senate Race in Arkansas. Whew! Many eternal worriers of the political process thought this debate, both men on the same stage at the same time with questions being hurled at them on topics Arkansas want to know, might never happen this election season.

The hour- long debate, sponsored by the Fayettevil­le Chamber of Commerce, will be Oct. 14 at the University of Arkansas Global Campus Auditorium ( right off the Fayettevil­le Square) at 7 p.m. The debate is to broadcast on all of the ABC affiliate stations within Arkansas.

Steve Clark, president and executive director of the Fayettevil­le Chamber of Commerce and a former state’s Attorney General, finally got the two sides to somewhat agree on the terms of the debate. The initial format was centered on three subjects – education, transporta­tion and job creation/ economic developmen­t.

Fair enough, both sides said initially. Those seem to be the issues Arkansans want to know about.

Then some staffer, no doubt a real “political techie,” said “What about “foreign affairs?”

And the wheels almost fell off this fragile debate wagon.

Congressma­n Tom Cotton, who brags at every opportunit­y as a military veteran of both Iraq and Afghanista­n, suddenly wanted to discuss some foreign policy.

U.S. Senator Mark Pryor, who is perhaps one of the least travelled U.S. Senators in the Upper Chamber in his two terms, did not want to discuss those issues. Pryor wanted, it seems, to stick with the three topics already decided.

Some felt that Pryor was dodging the foreign policy issues in the debate. I have to ask: Why not dodge the foreign policy issue.

Do Arkansans really want to know what these two guys know about foreign affairs?

There has not been any Congressma­n or U.S. Senator from Arkansas, since 1974 that could even begin to carry the foreign affairs briefcase of the late J.W. Fulbright. MAYLON RICE, A FORMER JOURNALIST HAVING WRITTEN BOTH NEWS AND COLUMNS FOR SEVERAL NWA PUBLICATIO­NS, HAS BEEN WRITING FOR THE ENTERPRISE-LEADER FOR SEVERAL YEARS.

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