Friday, November 27, 2009

Opinion

Peter Roff

Three Problems With Obama's Poll Numbers: Divisiveness, North Korea, and Nukes

April 06, 2009 11:28 AM ET | Peter Roff | Permanent Link | Print

By Peter Roff, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

President Obama's European tour seems to be generating big positives for him. The April 2-4 Gallup poll has his approval rating at 62 percent among the more than 1,500 U.S. adults surveyed. The April 1-2 Newsweek poll has his job approval at 61 percent among the just 1,000 adult respondents. Pollster Scott Rasmussen, who surveyed 1,500 likely U.S. voters, has Obama's job approval at 53 percent—and has about a third of those (36 percent) saying they "strongly approve" of the way he is performing his job as president.

In a way, this is not really surprising. Americans like to see their president being greeted with praise and adulation overseas. It makes us feel good about ourselves as a country; the president, in this case Obama, is an extension of ourselves. But for all that, there are a couple of danger points on the horizon.

First, as the Pew Research Center points out in a recent publication, President Obama is the most polarizing chief executive of the last 40 years, at least at this point into an administration. The 61-point gap between how Democrats view Obama's job performance and how Republicans view it is larger, by 10 points, than it was for George W. Bush—who at this point into his term was still dealing with the issue of his election being legitimate—remember "selected, not elected?" The good news for Obama is that more than half of self-described independents—57 percent—are sticking with him.

Danger points two and three are closely connected—and may have a far greater effect on independents than any of the issues that have thus far dominated the debate: North Korea's launch of what appears to have been a long-range missile and the president's call in Prague for a nuclear-free world, coming within hours of each other.

As a general rule, independents tend to be moved by national defense issues more than other kinds of domestic policy if they feel the security of the United States is somehow threatened. Rasmussen also found that 57 percent of Americans want to see a military response to the North Korean launch.

The call for a "nuclear-free world" harkens back to the "nuclear freeze" period of the late 1970s, a time when the United States was perceived as weak on the world stage. And, while the president's call for a reduction in the nuclear stockpile is laudable, the fact is that it is already lower than at any time since the Eisenhower administration thanks to the efforts of George W. Bush.

Resuming discussion of a "nuclear-free world," especially in a way that blames the United States—"As a nuclear power—as the only nuclear power to have used a nuclear weapon—the United States has a moral responsibility to act," Obama said in Prague—does not exactly invite good feelings here at home. And to do so at a time when North Korea, which is just about nobody's friend, looks like it has ratcheted up its delivery capabilities, rather than appear statesman-like, could just wind up being reckless.

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Tags: North Korea | nuclear weapons

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Reader Comments

The Truth:

One man's rogue nation just might be some country that has witnessed what the US does to a country it happens to disagree with. A couple of nukes goes a long way to keep a carrier battle group away from flight operation distance.

If you only have 12 in total gazillion dollar carrier battle groups, you might strategically decide not to risk them and keep them f^#$%!@g home!!

Obama works for EXACTLY the same crooks as Bush--he just told a bunch of lies to get there--just like Bush. Obama IS SCARED to bring the troops home for they will surely side with "we the people" after a few military family members get hurt or killed.

Besides, who wants to get hung alongside Bush, Cheney and the gang when the NEW constitution gets installed with a law like hey--here is a good idea. How about the death penalty for corruption in government offices. Clean that mess up fast. No wonder China is getting it together.

thats good

thats a good history on north korea

Obama has a vision

The 1970s and 200s are different periods in time. Today China is a rising superpower, but its nuclear arsenal is small compared to ours. It has only up to 400 warheads, while we have 7,000. It has the clout to seriously expand its nuclear arsenal, and it could well do so justifying American reluctance to disarm. Its economy will eventually match ours. What will stop it from expanding its nuclear weapons and disarm, in say 2020?

India is a rising global power too and at some point will reach a stage where it cannot be pressurized to reduce its arsenal. Although it has about a 100 warheads, it has stockpiled enough plutonium to build 1,000. It bristles with rage how it was sanctioned by us, while we kept expanding ours. Sooner than later it will be a global force to reckon with. How can we convince India to denuclearize then?

Rogue nations like Pakistan, N. Korea, and Iran have a greater incentive to develop and expand their arsenals as they feel threatened. The US should take the leadership in creating a nuclear free world. Pakistan is getting Talibanized by the day. Think about Al Qaeda armed with 65 warheads, or Kim Jong Il with a nuclear tipped ICBM capable of reaching Seattle or LA.

Nuclear weapons threaten us more than the security they offer.

The US also has a legal commitment to disarm under the NPT.

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Peter Roff is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. A former senior political writer for United Press International, he is currently a senior fellow at the Institute for Liberty and at Let Freedom Ring, a non-partisan public policy organization. His writing has also appeared on Fox News' Fox Forum.

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