Jacob Heilbrunn wrote an item a couple of years ago that stuck with me, because the point is too often overlooked. He argued at the time that we were witnessing the “twilight of the wise man” and “the last gasp” of the Republican foreign policy establishment.
Two years later, I think it’s safe to say that “gasp” and passed and the GOP foreign policy establishment is no more. Jonathan Bernstein argued yesterday:
What is missing, specifically? The Republican side of “establishment” foreign policy. That is, a group of people who are certainly Republicans, but are not particularly partisan and who are comfortable working with the similar set of Democrats. Think Dick Lugar; think Colin Powell; think, perhaps more than anyone over the last 50 years, George H.W. Bush. Those Republicans, as Lugar’s defeat for re-election last year demonstrated, have been driven to the fringes of their party (or perhaps out of it; Powell is still a Republican, but supported Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012).
Why does that matter for Barack Obama? There just are not very many Republicans remaining who both care about foreign policy and national security and who are also inclined to work with a Democratic president as a matter of course. Those who do have virtually no clout within their party. Which means that when Obama proposes something, he starts with essentially the same zero Republican votes that he starts with on domestic-policy proposals.
In the context of the debate over U.S. policy in Syria, the point is not that a robust GOP foreign policy establishment would necessarily favor one course over another. Rather, if the Republican foreign policy establishment existed, we’d see a more constructive debate featuring GOP policymakers raising credible concerns and producing a more thoughtful dialog — perhaps even a wiser outcome.
For that matter, if the party had elder statesmen and women with credibility on these issues, other makers could take their cues from their foreign policy establishment, following their lead.
Instead we have congressional Republicans making awful, contradictory arguments, reflexively opposing everything President Obama proposes because President Obama has proposed it, and even hoping to sidestep congressional responsibilities in this area altogether.
Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) told John Hudson this week, “If we had taken this vote, it would’ve been the most important in 10 years. The point I tried to make is if you oppose this on principle, great. But if you oppose this because it’s Barack Obama’s plan, you should really rethink what your job is.”
None of this seems to resonate with most of the contemporary GOP.









