There is “no question” Russian President Vladimir Putin views the Obama administration as weak, former Vice President Dick Cheney said during an interview on Sunday.
“We have created an image around the world, not just to the Russians, of weakness,” Cheney said on CBS News’s Face the Nation. Obama “hasn’t got any credibility with our allies,” Cheney added, after the president backed away from a military strike against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who crossed Obama’s designated “red line” when he allegedly launched a chemical attack in August that killed more than 1,400 of his own people.
Republicans continue to say President Obama has acted passively in his response to the crisis in Ukraine, a country currently lurching toward the brink of war. The Russian government has threatened to suspend international inspections of nuclear weapons and recently moved more troops into Crimea, the contested peninsula in southeastern Ukraine.
Obama has declared his plans to pressure and punish Russia economically and diplomatically while pushing for a non-military solution in Ukraine.
Cheney criticized that approach on Sunday, suggesting Obama instead explore military options that don’t place troops on the ground, such as offering the Ukrainians equipment and training, or reinstating the ballistic missile defense program.
In a telephone call on Saturday with leaders of the United Kingdom, France and Italy, President Obama welcomed the unified stance the United States and European Union had taken against Russia’s military intervention. He led a similar conversation with the presidents of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia. They all agreed on the need for Russia to recall its military forces to its bases and for the restoration of sovereignty and territorial integrity in Ukraine.
The Obama administration’s policies cause allies to believe Americans don’t follow through with their promises, Cheney said. The United States must “take steps that will guarantee and convey the notion — especially to our friends in Europe — that we keep our commitments,” he added. “So far that’s a doubt.”
Cheney is one of several Republicans who have publicly stated that Putin is taking advantage of Obama’s flaws. Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin criticized Obama during a speech at CPAC on Saturday for his passive threats against the Russian leader. Additionally, she basked in a “told-ya-so” moment for predicting six years ago the current situation in Ukraine would occur under Obama’s leadership.
Palin: Putin wrestles bears, Obama wears mom jeans
Several Republicans have blamed the crisis on the failure of the Obama administration to avenge the 2012 attack on Benghazi that killed four Americans. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said Obama’s shortcomings have been recurring problems during the past five years of his presidency.
“Putin fears no retribution,” Cruz said on ABC News’ This Week. “Their policy has been to alienate and abandon our friends, and to coddle and appease our enemies.”
“Putin is a KGB thug,” he added. “When the protests began in Ukraine, the president should have stood unapologetically, empathetically for freedom. When the United States doesn’t speak for freedom, tyrants notice.”









