Hailing The Leader As A War President And The Powers That Go With It

Thursday, May 21st, 2009 by RLR

From Salon
By Glenn Greewald

In a February, 2004 interview with Tim Russert, George Bush provoked much derision by proudly declaring himself to be what he called a “war president.” This week, Newsweek’s Editor Jon Meacham interviewed Barack Obama, adopted Bush’s label and applied it to Obama, asking him:

Can anything get you ready to be a war president?

Nothing excites our media stars more than saluting and fetishizing the President as a “War President” and “Commander-in-Chief” (David Broder today, in his column entitled “Obama in Command”: Obama is “continuing, with minor modifications, the policies and practices of his Republican predecessor . . . . Obama’s liberal critics are right. He is a different man now. He has learned what it means to be commander in chief”). But isn’t the phrase “war president” a complete redundancy when it comes to the U.S.? Which American presidents were not “war presidents”?

Bill Clinton presided over his war in the Balkans and various bombing campaigns in Iraq (”Operation Desert Fox”), Afghanistan and the Sudan; Bush 41 had his war — the glorious Desert Storm — against Iraq, which followed his intrepid invasion of Panama; Reagan conducted his various secret wars in Central America and got his direct war glory by invading Grenada and by bombing Libya (heroically taking out the infant of that country’s leader); Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon were all “war presidents” in Southeast Asia; Truman and Eisenhower both presided over the Korean War and the Cold War. I suppose Jimmy Carter may be one of the very few Presidents to whom the label may not apply, since our military involvement during his four post-Vietnam years was of the indirect kind, though even Carter presided over the attempted military rescue of American hostages in Iran and the peak of the Cold War. And I’ve omitted far more American military actions from this list than I included.

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