Thursday night’s televised argument between Biden and Ryan has generated plenty of comment about the performance of each man, and “performance” is the appropriate word. These staged encounters between political rivals are not really “debates” any more than the theatrics of the Congress are “deliberations.” The contenders grin, grimace and generally mug for the camera, posturing to appear thoughtful and reflective, or combative and aggressive, as they have been coached.
The Vice Presidential debate had little national security content, but the subject led the discussion, principally because the mess in Libya has recently been so much in the news. Indeed, the day began with a contentious Congressional hearing on the subject.
To those who have fought in actual ground combat, the question of what actually happened in Libya was clear from the beginning: Attacks using small arms, automatic weapons, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars do not occur spontaneously, and they require targeting, organization, preparation and rehearsal. It may have seemed like good politics to portray the tragedy as beyond the administration’s control, but that was a foolish thing to do, and somebody at the top of the military food chain should have advised the White House not to try it. Perhaps someone did, and he was rebuffed, but this case of misrepresenting the truth should serve as a lesson to everyone in office: bad news doesn’t get any better with age. The attempt to explain malfeasance by splitting hairs- during both the hearing and the debate- merely compounds the error and makes the administration appear not just inept but mendacious as well.








