Hell Freezes Over: CNN Host Says Biden Must Go Back to Trump's Immigration...
The Latest Stormy Daniels Development Shows How This Trial Is a Total Circus
Biden Administration Hurls Israel Under the Bus Again
MSNBC Is Pro-Adult Film Testimony
Joe Biden’s Biggest Problem
Stunned by the Reaction to the Hamas Attack on Israel
Are We Really Going to Let the Mob Set American Public Policy?
Congress Must Act to Stop Noncitizens from Voting
The Climate Church is Hemorrhaging Parishioners
The Egg and I: Could Today’s Bird Flu Be Tomorrow’s COVID?
Economic Freedom Increases Human Welfare
Pro-Growth Tax Reform is Driving Arizona’s Bright Economic Outlook
Here's Where Speaker Mike Johnson Stands on Abortion
Trump Addresses the Very Real Chance of Him Going to Jail
Yes, Jen Psaki Really Said This About Biden Cutting Off Weapons Supply to...
OPINION

Hagel Calls America's Problems "Worse Than What FDR Faced"

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Senator Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) gave a grim assessment of the Bush administration Thursday and said the problems facing America today are “far deeper and wider and worse than what FDR faced.”

Advertisement

Speaking at the Cato Institute in Washington DC where he was promoting his new book America: The Next Chapter, Hagel blasted the administration for refusing to adjust to the realities of a dynamic and changing world. He was particularly critical of President Bush’s aggressive war policy.

“We can’t compare Iraq or the Middle East today to the bipolar challenges of the Cold War. Relatively simple, those days,” he said.

He accused the Bush administration of focusing exclusively on terrorism and ignoring other crucial challenges, saying the government had “deflected our attention and resources over the past seven years to scaring the hell out of the American people.”

He also criticized the government’s Iran policy, saying President Bush needed to take a “wider-lens view” of Iran and couldn’t risk alienating Iran’s 75 million people, many of whom despise its current regime.

The articulate Nebraska senator and Vietnam War veteran emerged as a leading Republican critic of the Iraq war in 2005. Although he had initially voted to give the president authorization to use force in Iraq in 2002, he later said he regretted his vote, compared the intervention to the Vietnam War, and called the White House “completely disconnected from reality.”

Advertisement

Hagel addressed recent rumors that he could be a choice for fellow anti-war Senator Barack Obama’s vice presidential nominee, saying he could not rule out the possibility, the same as “any responsible citizen who cares about his country.”

Rather than divert the nation’s attention to terrorism, Hagel recommended that the next president address a plethora of interconnected global issues, many of which had been neglected under Bush.

“We have no trade policy. We have no energy policy. We spend a lot of money, but there’s no greater purpose, greater context to it,” he said.

Hagel has announced he will not seek reelection for a third term this year.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos