By Alan
Caruba
Jimmy Carter was elected President for
one reason—Richard M. Nixon. The feeling in the nation was that the born-again
Sunday school teacher and Georgia Governor was the perfect antithesis of the
President who was forced to resign over the Watergate scandal. He defeated
Gerald Ford, Nixon’s Vice President who was largely punished for the 1974 pardon
he gave the disgraced Nixon.
In a similar fashion Ronald Reagan was
elected President to replace Carter who was widely seen as a failure for both
his domestic and foreign policies. For the years since, Carter was understood to
have been the worst President, but a recent Quinnipiac University poll of 1,446
registered voters ranked Obama as the worst since the end of World War II,
granting Carter an approval rating four times higher than Obama.
I never liked Carter and Reagan’s
election in 1980 marked the beginning of my transition from liberal to
conservative; one that I suspect occurred for many others as well. Larry
Bell, a NewsMax contributor, commenting on the Quinnipiac poll, noted that
“Just as with Obama, the Carter administration had inherited a recession and did
little to improve a weak economy.”
After Carter took office Bell noted
that “unemployment continued to rise, inflation reached 13 percent, and interest
rates approached 20 percent.” Reagan set about improving the economy, rebuilt
our military strength, confronted the Soviet Union, and the 1980s are remembered
fondly by those who lived through his two terms.
Carter faced problems with Iran that
had seized twenty U.S. diplomats in 1979 and held them for 444 days,
unresponsive to his efforts to free them. A military attempt failed, killing
thirty soldiers when our helicopters crashed. I have always thought that the
Iranians took Reagan’s measure and feared what he would do. They released the
hostages the same day he was first sworn into
office.
On August 5, USA Today reported that Carter had
“called upon the West to recognize the U.S.-designated terrorist group Hamas as
a legitimate ‘political actor’ that represents the bulk of the Palestine
population.”
Extremely critical of Israel’s
military operation to protect its citizens against the deluge of rockets coming
out of Gaza, Carter and former Irish president Mary Robinson had their views
published in a Foreign Policy
article, saying “There is no humane or legal justification for the way the
Israeli Defense Forces are conducting this war.”
Carter has never met a despot, from
Soviet premier Leonid Brezhnev to Bashar Assad and his father, Hafez, to the
gang that runs Hamas that he didn’t like. That is the quintessential trait of
liberals who have always been attracted to despots. They’re the ones who wear
Che Guevara t-shirts.
Carter, different from most
evangelicals, has never given any evidence of respecting Jews or Israel. The
high point of his presidency was the Egypt-Israel peace treaty known as the 1978
Camp David accords, but both parties had their own reasons for agreeing to its
terms.
In his twenty-first book, “Palestine:
Peace Not Apartheid”, published in November 2006, Carter sided totally with the
so-called Palestinians. Writing in the Middle
East Quarterly’s spring 2007 edition, a longtime advisor to Carter,
Kenneth W. Stein, criticized it at length, noting “egregious errors of both
commission and omission. To suit his desired ends, he manipulates information,
redefines facts, and exaggerates conclusions.” That’s a nice way of saying he
lied a lot.
Stein pointed out that Carter’s book
“omits mention that Hamas denies the right of a Jewish state to exist in the
Middle East and the group’s belief that historical Palestine belongs in its
entirety to Muslims.”
The book’s title reflected the libel
against Israel when it used the word “apartheid”, likening Israel to South
Africa’s racial oppression of blacks until it was forced to rescind it. It is
comparable to the lies that Israel is the “occupier” of lands won in the wars
waged against it. It’s like saying the U.S. is the occupier of land formerly
owned by Mexico.
Compounding Carter’s slur is the fact
that Arab citizens of Israel have always had the same rights as Jews and others
who emigrated there. At present there are eleven Arabs in Israel’s Knesset
(parliament). In only one respect do they differ; Israel does not require Arab
citizens to serve in its Defense Force, but they may volunteer to serve if they
wish.
Recognizing a terrorist group like
Hamas, as Carter calls for, is not that different from saying the same of
Hezbollah or the newly-arisen Islamic State that has seized land from Syria and
Iraq. It’s beyond stupid. It betrays a deeply held anti-Semitism. In 2009, that
was so evident Carter apologized with an open letter to the Jewish community in
America.
Hamas has not disavowed its stated
intention to destroy Israel and kill all of its Jewish citizens.
That Americans are comparing Obama
unfavorably to Carter, lifting Carter from the basement of presidential
approval, tells us a lot about his performance in office since his 2008 election
and 2012 reelection.
At least Americans had the good sense
to end Carter’s presidency in one term, but it virtually assures that Obama will
replace Carter as the worst U.S. President ever.
© Alan Caruba, 2014
2 comments:
Upon his death, the nation's politicians will be forced to say good things about Carter that he will not deserve, but being said by politicians, we will know the praise is unjustified and is said in all insincerity. In the years thereafter, Carter will be remembered not because he was an incompetent but perhaps well meaning president, but because he was an old fool who lacked the wisdom to remain silent when the world had long became deaf to whatever he had to say.
Ford was not Nixons' Vice-President, that would have Spiro Agnew, who resigned, and was subsequently replaced by Ford who was Speaker of the House.
Little trivia there, Ford is the only President who was never elected as President, or Vice-President.
As for Carter, I ALWAYS referred to him as "not MY President", same as the current pResident in the White House. I didn't suffer to read the rest of your story, as I can't stand errors in historical facts, and this comment will likely not be posted, or read by you anyway.
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