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Is GOP now the party of peace and love?

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I’m not at all comfortable with my new position to the right of Republican leaders on foreign policy.

As a child who grew up watching the Vietnam War on the nightly news and fearing it would still be raging when I turned 18, I have always opposed the military adventurism of Republican leaders, whether it was Richard Nixon in Vietnam and Cambodia; Ronald Reagan in Central America or George W. Bush in Iraq.

We all knew our roles back then. Republican leaders saw the world as a threat to be neutralized and an economic opportunity to be exploited. American exceptionalism meant remaking ancient cultures by means of force in nations like Iraq and Afghanistan.

My role was to shake my fist in anger and frustration and do my best to vote them out when given the opportunity.

Now, I find myself to the right of both of the two leading Republican contenders for president on the war in Ukraine.

Donald Trump, who called Vladimir Putin a “genius” at the start of the invasion, is now advocating for a peace plan that would reward Russia for its aggression. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, his top challenger if the polls are to be believed, called the war a “territorial dispute” that is not in our national interest.

The Republican Party is divided on the issue, but trending toward isolationism. A recent Pew poll found that 40 percent of Republicans think we’re doing too much to help Ukraine, while only 17 percent said we weren’t doing enough.

Do Republicans only support wars when it’s our soldiers getting killed? Have we been an occupying force for so long that our sympathies lie with the invaders?

There are valid questions being asked by those who fear escalation of this war. I wrote a column a year ago at the start of the war that was nothing but questions. Most remain unanswered. None of us can predict what the last play of a defeated Putin will be.

President Joe Biden has attempted a “Three Little Bears” approach, trying  not to be so hot as to invite World War III, nor so cold as to endanger Ukrainian defeat. It’s not making anybody happy, but it seems to sort of be working. So far.

I don’t know if Republican opposition to the war in Ukraine reflects a dramatic shift on foreign policy, or just reflexive opposition to a Democratic president. But we’ll find out soon.

The Senate is advancing a bill that would repeal the authorization granted during the Bush administration to go to war in Iraq. It will be interesting to see how many members vote against that bill while at the same time opposing support for Ukraine. 

Walter Rubel is a freelance journalist based in Las Cruces. His 40-plus-year career includes work in Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas and— since 2002 — in New Mexico, covering Las Cruces and the state Legislature. His opinions are his own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Las Cruces Bulletin. Rubel can be reached at waltrubel@gmail.com.


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