Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, has enjoyed a stream of positive press over the last week praising him for his 2012 comments warning about the threat posed by Russia.
During a CNN interview leading up to the 2012 presidential election, Romney — the Republican nominee at the time — said Russia is America’s “No. 1 geopolitical foe,” an allegation he made because “they fight every cause for the world’s worst actors.”
All this praise ignores Romney’s own role in empowering the Russian government.
After Russia invaded Ukraine last week, Romney’s defenders resurfaced the quote along with remarks from Romney’s 2012 debate against then-President Barack Obama, in which Obama told Romney the terrorist group Al Qaeda posed a greater threat to the United States than Russia at the time.
“The 1980s are now calling to ask for their foreign policy back,” Obama had said, mocking Romney’s answer.
For context, Obama’s comments came at a time when the U.S. had more than 77,000 troops in Afghanistan and was 10 years into a “war on terrorism” that eventually became the longest war in U.S. history. Claiming the targets in that war were America’s greatest geopolitical foe seems, to me, less a flub and more an essential justification a president might make for putting thousands of troops in harm’s way.
Nonetheless, multiple outlets — and Romney himself — have pointed to Russia’s invasion as evidence he was right in retrospect. “The ‘80s called’ and we didn’t answer,” Romney said in a statement last week.
Even Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., credited Romney for his stance from more than 10 years ago. “This action by Putin further confirms that Mitt Romney was right when he called Russia the No. 1 geopolitical foe,” Lieu told CNN last week.








