Palin Predicts President’s Putz-Poor Policy

| March 1, 2014

What with Russian forces seizing all major control points in the Crimean Peninsula today, numerous sources are pointing to the prediction of Sarah Palin back in the 2008 campaign that just such a scenario was possible under a weak president like Barack Obama. Here’s the way she called it:

“After the Russian Army invaded the nation of Georgia, Senator Obama’s reaction was one of indecision and moral equivalence, the kind of response that would only encourage Russia’s Putin to invade Ukraine next,”

Vice-presidential candidate Palin was at the time, in 2008, mocked and ridiculed for her political naiveté by gloating gurus of geopolitics for daring to advance the idea that a clueless Commander in Chief might not measure up to such a challenge. But here we are, six years down the road of all our lives, and just who is being proved to be savvier in world affairs, that confident, Moose-Shooting Mama from Alaska or America’s embarrassingly naked emperor who once grandly proclaimed he would command the seas? Not to take away from Sarah’s geopolitical awareness but anyone with any attentiveness to what goes on around this globe could have seen this coming just as Palin did; but, sadly and tragically, not the affirmative action product who now inhabits that so all important oval office whose grand educational process apparently left him ignorant of this:

Due to its northern latitudes, Russia has always been cursed with a lack of warm water ports that are naval operational year-round. The much more agreeable climate of the Crimean Peninsula at Russia’s southern extreme is what led to Lord Potemkin’s creation of the Black Sea Fleet in 1783, based in Sevastopol. Over the past centuries, Russia has made the Black Sea their backyard lake with a mighty naval presence that extends through the Bosporus into the Mediterranean. Additionally, the air arm of the Russian Navy has made the Crimean Peninsula a major base of operations. That fleet with its air resources has been a strategic player in much of the political events transpiring in the Med and beyond for decades.

So it should come as no surprise that Russia would not look favorably on losing the long term investment in infrastructure they have in the Crimea to a Ukranian government eagerly seeking political and economic alignment with the European Union. I hate to admit it but the Obama Administration is somewhat correct when it characterizes the Russian military takeover of strategic control points in the Crimea as an uncontested arrival. The reason for that is that the Crimea has always been a part of Ukraine that cleaved closely to the Russian mother country more so than the provinces to the north.

But please, help me here; the next time you hear some liberal twit diss Sarah Palin as too inexperienced to operate on the national stage, point out that she had the superior world view back in 2008 to foresee a foreign policy problem of which the unaware, intellectual lightweight now in our White House had no glimmer. Let’s face the truth here, folks: Vladimir Putin has the political strength and courage to decisively do what is right for his country at a critical moment in world history, while our metrosexual misfit dithers in indecision. Perhaps Osama Bin Laden had a more correct world view than we supposed when he compared his movement’s struggle to one between the strong horse and the weak horse.

What would you wager that done-dead Bin Laden would place his bet on the strong horse, Putin, and dismiss this lame and limping, politically-fueled, polished pony, Obama, who was too intellectually morally and spindly-legged to have been in this all important world race to start with?

Crossposted at American Thinker

Category: Barack Obama/Joe Biden, John McCain/Sarah Palin

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Just Plain Jason

Not really commenting on the story so much as…

Pretty new look.

NHSparky

Hardly surprising on several levels. For over five years, we’ve had an administration which has been on a world apology tour for things they need not apologize for, but they do it anyway.

At the same time, they try “reaching out” to our enemies, or at least not bitch-slapping them as they deserve, with the predictable results. I’m sure the MSM and liberal pundits (but I repeat myself) who ridiculed her for this statement will be around any second now to apologize.

Yup, any second now….

Sparks

First it’s so nice to not have to write @2 so and so. Anyway, thanks Sparky, well said. I absolutely hat it when our government apologizes for anything we are not directly, and currently responsible for…which we did incorrectly. MSM will find something to “get” Palin over instead.

These days a conservative isn’t even allowed a brain fart moment, (think Quayle and Potatoe).

But let the MSM call out Obama for the same thing Wikipedia describes Quayle as. It follows: [i]”Throughout his time as vice president, Quayle was widely ridiculed in the media and by many in the general public, both in the U.S. and overseas, as an intellectual lightweight and general incompetent.”[i/] So, how much more of an intellectual NO weight and general incompetent is Emperor Obama I ask? Worse is my answer. But

Ex-PH2

What would I have bet, Poetrooper? I’d be sitting here stinking rich, sneering down my nose at the welfare queens who despise people who work for a living, while they’re lining up to get on trash TV shows, because they’re the marones who voted for bodaprez.

Someone should have stomped on LBJ’s dick when he proposed the welfare state back in 1965.

Adam

I seem to remember Romney saying something about Russia not being our friends. And him being ridiculed for it.

AW1 Tim

This what happens when you elect president Mom-Jeans to the White House. Many of us, as you said, and Sarah said, saw this coming, and I assure you that it will get even worse.

We have a treaty with the Ukraine, co-signed by the UK and Russia, which demands that the US & UK provide whatever support is needed, including military support, should the Ukraine’s sovereignty be violated. Under the terms of the agreement, what Russia has done amounts to an act of war to which the US & UK are obligated to respond.

I am loath to say this, but this is the first time in my life that I would ever counsel the US Military to refuse to obey their CinC, should he seek to conduct any sort of military operations in the Ukraine, or against the Russians. This is 1914 all over again.

Hell, it’s Sept 1939 with Hitler invading Poland and all of a sudden finding out that the Poles have a secret agreement with the Brits & French to go to war to defend Poland.

By the way, although the treaty was ratified under Clinton, Obama just recently renewed it with OUR solemn pledge to come to the aid of the Ukraine should it be invaded.

We are so fucked. To quote: “This will get out of hand. It will get out of hand and we will be lucky to live through it.”

Ex-PH2

So far, all that has come from the Oval Office is ‘costs’ and hot air.

I personally do not think that bodaprez or any of his ilk have the cojones to fulfill the conditions of that treaty. If anything, I think bodaprez will seek appeasement.

Is now the time to quote Hiram Mann?

OldSoldier54

I’ve been waiting for something like this to happen. Even Bush screwed the pooch with Russia over Georgia.

We are so hosed.

FistSFC

Nice Clancy movie quote.

Joe

As a practical matter what should our response be? Lob a few nukes over? I could be proven wrong, but I find it hard to believe Putin would resort to a full scale invasion Ukraine. Question: I know Ukraine proper forfeited its nuclear weapons after the breakup of the USSR, but are there nukes at the Sevastopol naval base or any of the other Russian controlled installations? Is there a risk of loose nukes? Keep in mind a wing nut Ukrainian MP just threatened Russia with nuclear attack. If so, I can understand Russia’s apprehension.

Ex-PH2

What do you call what Vlad has been doing, Joe? It doesn’t look like a stroll in the woods to me.

Ex-PH2

Here’s a little update on what’s going on in Ukraine.

http://news.msn.com/world/putin-takes-on-west-over-ukraine-who-blinks-first

BK

The fuller context of Sarah Palin’s comments are revelatory – the snippet of her comment imbues her with a prescience that she didn’t have then and doesn’t have now. Her comments then also indicated she didn’t really fully understand what happened in Georgia/South Ossetia. She had a 50/50 shot of being correct on this one with Ukraine. In her original statements she didn’t mention anything about either the pro-Russian sentiment in South Ossetia or the importance of Crimea to Russia. A lot of armchair quarterbacks said this at the same 1000 ft view Palin did, it neither validates nor invalidates their sophisticated foreign policy analysis.

I would be quoting Mitt Romney instead, to be honest. He truly did display an in-depth understanding of this one. I’m not completely certain that Palin has not earned the disrespect of the left, though certainly not to the vile extent it goes. Romney sure got the short end of the stick from the press, though. The lens of a businessman on Ukraine would be the one to look to, as those predictors presaged this for quite a while.

BK

An addendum: the only thing I would say is that while I don’t believe Palin knew *why* she was right about President Obama’s foreign policy, everything she said about it is true. It’s been clumsy and ineffective since day one. From Syria to Russia, even how we’ve mishandled central Africa with the LRA/Kony, I’ve been very disappointed. Putin gets to sneer and push Russia right back to its previous global influence why we stand with hands in pockets.

Ex-PH2

Regardless of anyone’s opinion of Palin’s acumen on this subject, the deed is done. It is now ‘raising concerns’ in the international community. http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/ukraine-crisis/russias-control-crimea-raises-international-tensions-n42196?from=en-us_msnhp&gt1=43001

I just love these well-tempered responses to an aggressive action by an aggressive dictator. There is, in fact, an entire list of such things, some of which we’ve already seen, as in ‘raising concerns’, ‘deeply troubled / concerned’, ‘serious costs’.

This is all hot air coming out of WDC and nothing else, we all instinctively know it. I’m mre concerned that Vlad seems to be reviving the Cold War relationship with Cuba and the Castros by parking a warship, however small it might be, in Havana harbor. What’s next? Rehab those old missile bunkers and set up a few launch sites here and there? Cape Canaveral is almost completely eliminated as a missile launch site, because we no longer have a manned space program, remember? And for what it’s worth, there isn’t a missilie launch site within 150 miles of Chicago, nor is there a military airbase because the Clinton admin sold Glenview to real estate developers.

Nice goin’, idiots.

Devtun

The Pwez too bored or too busy w/ golf & fund raisers to attend national security meeting(s)….again. Drudge needs to leave the poor guy alone…he clearly doesn’t enjoy the mundane work of POTUS.

Joe

Found the answer to my own question about nikes. The Federation of American Scientists website states: “Russia agreed to station no more than 25,000 military personnel at the bases, and that it would place no nuclear weapons at the leased facilities.” Still, one has to wonder.

Some say we make a mistake when we try and think like the Russians, they have a different logic. Another person said every time we think the worst of Russia we’re right. So I may be completely wrong. I just hope it is a limited action meant to secure their bases and not a full scale invasion. I find it hard to believe Putin would spend $50 billion on the Olympics as a world coming-out party for the new, friendlier Russia only to tank the whole investment a couple of weeks later. But maybe I am thinking in western terms.

2/17 Air Cav

“She [Palin] had a 50/50 shot of being correct on this one with Ukraine.” Yeah, and obama has a 100% chance of being wrong.

There is no way–none–that the US can do anything meaningful with respect to the Ukraine mess. And I find no unambiguous language anywhere that binds us to do anything, even if we could. The greatest threats to a peaceful resolution are the nuts in the Ukraine. I can’t say I can ID the legitimate gov’t there right now or who has control of the military assets. Vlad is not about to pushed around by anyone, especially an unhappy and armed next-door neighbor. Once stability is returned, we’ll see what Ukraine wants to do regarding their national life. As far as I am concerned, it’s a maga-sized Occupy Movement right now, an internal problem.

2/17 Air Cav

I agree with me. (Just thought I’d try the Reply button.) Did I say I hate change?

Ex-PH2

Ukraine was once the bread basket of the Soviet Union.

That changed with the meltdown at Chernobyl, and after the breakup of the USSR.

There are differences of opinion between ethnic Russians in Crimea and Ukrainians in Kiev.

And no matter what kind of bubbling blather comes out of Foggy Bottom, Vlad will do as he pleases, because ain’t nobody gonna say he cain’t.