With war in Iraq suddenly back in style, Dick Cheney met with House Republicans on Tuesday to bash President Obama’s foreign policy and stump for more defense spending.
Cheney’s visit marked a sort of coming out party for Republican hawks, who polls show are rapidly gaining support among GOP voters after years in which the non-interventionists, led by Cheney nemesis Rand Paul, had the momentum.
“It was a great message — and something we needed to hear and hopefully it sticks with a lot of my colleagues who kind of had this creep towards isolationism,” Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) told the Los Angeles Times. “Hopefully this is an awakening that we have to be very strong and very serious.”
Rep. John Fleming (R-LA) told The Daily Beast that Cheney accused Obama of “facilitating the Muslim Brotherhood,” the Islamic movement that won elections in Egypt only to be deposed by the military, while CNN reported that Cheney dinged Obama for not demanding the US leave a residual force behind while negotiating a withdrawal with the Iraqi government.
The reemergence of Cheney, whose legacy of expansive executive power and aggressive foreign policy is still controversial even within the GOP, comes as Congressional leaders are trying to determine how to respond to Obama’s escalating campaign against the Islamic State.
On Tuesday, Republican House Speaker John Boehner declined to commit to Congressional votes on military action against ISIS – or to rule out ground troops – until after he meets with the White House to hear their broader plan.
“We have a very serious problem that demands a strategy and, until there is a strategy, there is no reason to talk about any of the specifics,” Boehner told reporters.
On the Senate side, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell also called on Obama to offer Congress a clear plan of action.
“Now that the president has conducted initial consultations with our allies, and stated his objective to degrade and destroy ISIL, it’s time to present a strategy to Congress,” McConnell said on the Senate floor. “I hope he will begin to do that today.”
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The two top Republicans, along with Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, are gathering at the White House today to discuss the conflict against the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). Reid and Pelosi have also so far kept mum on whether a vote is necessary in the short or long term.









