March 06, 2011
AP
By John Bolton, Daily New
As Libya's bloody conflict rages on, important lessons for U.S. foreign policy are emerging from the past month's Middle East turmoil. Starting with Tunisia, the Obama administration has seemed repeatedly surprised by anti-regime demonstrations, unsure of the stakes for America and its allies and unprepared conceptually and operationally to deal with the consequences.
In Egypt, there was contradictory, unhelpful White House rhetoric when silence would have been prudent - and in Libya, silence when strong American words (and actions) were amply warranted.
"He will have to explain to the American people why his vision for bigger government, more spending, and higher taxes will work over the next four years when it hasn't worked in the past three and a half years.” – Sen. Rob Portman on President Obama
By Justin FishelPublished May 16, 2012 | FoxNews.comIt was May 10, 1970, in Se San, Cambodia. Spc. Leslie H. Sabo Jr. and his platoon were ambushed by a large enemy force. The 22-year-old rifleman...
dloesch: Obama admin politicized student loans, blamed GOP for for wanting to raise the rate, did it themselves in legislation. http://t.co/cvsoJNZE
dloesch: RT @CorieWhalen: Hey @dloesch, the way the progs reported your husband for spam? They've now done it to a conservative Latina. @MSalasBlair ...
drudge_report: 'Armed Environmental Police Officers' Shut Down Ice Cream Stand... http://t.co/4aZ34DEj
gatewaypundit: RT @KristinaRibali: Wisconsin update! http://t.co/tLvfSzsJ via @gatewaypundit #Wirecall #tcot #tlot
washingtonpost: Senate committee approves legislation to give benefits to same-sex partners of federal workers: http://t.co/VgXpuXqc