Will the Coward Colin Powell Endorse Barack Obama?
Will Gen. Colin Powell endorse Sen. Barack Obama? It's the question rippling through Washington's chattering class. This talk was sparked by the National Journal's report that the two met privately on June 18 in Powell's Alexandria, Va., office and talked for about an hour.
Sen. John McCain's campaign privately and through surrogates insists no such endorsement is pending. In fact, GOP sources predict that when and if Powell makes an endorsement, his support will go to McCain, as the two are close allies. Whether that's true or not, it's more important to look at why Powell would consider a revolt against his own party.
The reasons for Obama's desire for a Powell endorsement are clear: Powell's support would boost Obama's perceived competence in foreign affairs and military matters. A Powell endorsement might persuade some more liberal Republicans to desert the party along with Powell.
Powell's reasons for meeting with Obama are an entirely different matter. Remember that General Powell supported the Bush Iraq invasion, clearly against his own better judgment. He carried tainted water, while refusing to drink out of the same contaminated tap. Powell should have instead resigned over his obvious disagreement with the president. He took the coward's route and stayed to curry favor with the GOP's far right. That strategy backfired on him.
For Powell's efforts, he was rewarded with a boot—booted out of the secretary of state position in the second Bush administration. It was pretty clear even Powell was having a hard time believing his own argument as he beseeched the United Nations in February 2003 to pass a resolution sanctioning a U.S. invasion of Iraq. He tried to make the case that Saddam Hussein was in control of large caches of hidden weapons of mass destruction.
POWELL: What you will see is an accumulation of facts and disturbing patterns of behavior. The facts on Iraqis' behavior—Iraq's behavior demonstrate that Saddam Hussein and his regime have made no effort—no effort—to disarm as required by the international community. Indeed, the facts and Iraq's behavior show that Saddam Hussein and his regime are concealing their efforts to produce more weapons of mass destruction.
The doubt in Powell's own voice was palpable. That day, he went from trustworthy hero to partisan hack. I remember Powell standing in front of a satellite picture with a pointer, explaining that what looked like a trailer was actually a cache of weapons of mass destruction, or WMD. It could have been a trailer full of DVDs.
To military insiders, though, Powell may never have been much more than a self-promoter to begin with. They remember his involvement in the investigation of the My Lai massacre of Vietnamese civilians by U.S. troops. Powell was then a 31-year-old Army major charged with investigating aspects of the atrocity. Powell was accused of whitewashing the carnage in his report. Many years later, CNN's Larry King asked Secretary of State Powell about atrocities of war. Powell responded: "I mean, I was in a unit that was responsible for My Lai. I got there after My Lai happened. So, in war, these sorts of horrible things happen every now and again, but they are still to be deplored."
In retrospect, his answer so mirrors a typical Obama brushoff, the comparison is unnerving.
Bottom line, it's completely unclear how many votes, if any, a Powell endorsement would bring to either presidential nominee. But one thing is clear: If Powell endorses Obama, the endorsement is more about an attempt to rehabilitate Powell's defiled image as an unenthusiastic warmonger than it is about much of anything else.
Tags: presidential election 2008 | Barack Obama | Colin Powell
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Reader Comments
You're absoultely right, Bonnie. If Powell didn't believe that Iraq was developing WMD's, he should have resigned. However, he didn't. You may want to think he was trying to buy GOP brownie points, but in reality the reason that Powell endorsed the Iraq invasion is because he himself believed that it Iraq was a threat. What I do think is that after the invasion, Powell felt the Bush Administration didn't do enough to quell violence, which is a legitimate argument. But this argument of, "Well, I don't support this venture, but I'm going to do it anyway because I want to be a hero with the right." is ludicrous.
By the by, didn't your favored candidate, Hillary Clinton, support the war until it served her to be against it to try and get the nomination of her party? So much for that plan. Then again, she might've been trying to score points with the right.
I will agree, though, that Powell is trying to improve his image, but if he thinks that he will improve it by backing Obama, he's going to have many surprises in store for him.
Lets hope for a better reason than "self"
Colin Powell either wants to support Obama's ideals and leadership talent-----or he doesn't. One would think, after his misadventures with Bush and the GOP, that he'd in fact be eager to do so NOT ONLY FOR HIS IMAGE, but for the sake of the country. After all, like Scott McClellan, he's been there and seen the errors, the arrogance, and the agenda deceit firsthand.
So, Gen. Powell, what do you recommend for us? More of the same? Or did you not get "used" enough by corporate machinery for you to recognize a need for hope and change?
Why would this make him a coward?
Since when does speaking your mind and supporting the candidate you truly believe in make you a coward? In fact, does it not make you more brave if you go against the very party, the very system that you now see as very WRONG in this country? If you now see a chance to make things better, isn't it braver to step forward and do what is best for your country no matter what evil and nasty things people say about you? Because in the long run, the only thing that will judge you is history, yourself, God (if there is one), and the family legacy you leave behind.
The cowards in this country are the sheep hiding behind party instead of thinking of this country and how much we have lost because we have been taught to shop and borrow and to live in fear of EVERYTHING. I'm never drinking that kool aid. This can be a great country again; question everything and wonder just what that person's agenda is - read read read ... because sheep don't read. Do they?
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