After a debate that left little room for him to talk foreign policy, Dr. Ben Carson penned an op-ed aimed at upping his credibility on an issue that’s taking center stage in the GOP presidential primary.
“Just War Theory demands that any war be waged in such a manner as to make the war as short as possible and limit the suffering and destruction of innocent people,” Carson wrote, arguing that President Obama’s war on ISIS is slow and ineffective and, because of that, “immoral.”
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“The various phrases we have created, including ‘surgical strikes,’ ‘measured force,’ ‘proportional response’ and a myriad of other soft words and catchy phrases describe, in fact, the slow incineration of human beings,” he said.
Carson argues that the U.S. should be arming the Kurds and helping them to achieve a state of their own, and advocates strongly for an information and propaganda war, likening it to the Cold War.
“I haven’t had an opportunity to weigh in on foreign policy,” Carson interjected near the end of Wednesday’s debate. “I just want to mention that when the war, when the issue occurred in 2003, I suggested to President Bush that he not go to war. Okay? I just want that on the record.”
The 14 other Republican presidential hopefuls had spent the night sparring over how many troops they’d send to Iraq and whether they’d tear up the Iran nuclear agreement or try and work with it. But as one of the three candidates who has not previously held elected office, Carson will need to prove his chops on foreign policy.









